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A numerical study of melt ponds

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Title A numerical study of melt ponds
Names Skyllingstad, Eric D. (creator)
Paulson, Clayton A. (creator)
Date Issued 2007-08-25 (iso8601)
Abstract High-resolution turbulence simulations are used to examine the importance of melt
pond geometry in setting pond growth rates and albedo. Modeling the circulation of
water in melt ponds using large-eddy simulation shows that both convective and windforced
conditions generate well-mixed ponds, suggesting that stratification is not a
significant factor in pond circulation. Simulations with a variety of pond shapes and
sizes indicate that the basic ratio of sidewall area to bottom area, R, can be used to
characterize melting rates for ponds with simple shapes. Ponds with large values of R will
generally melt more rapidly in the horizontal direction at the expense of bottom
melting. Consequently, small and elongated ponds will have a relatively larger lateral
growth rate in comparison with large, symmetric ponds, assuming minimal lateral flux of
meltwater. Simulations also show that pond shape can affect the sidewall and bottom
turbulence transfer rates. Ponds with large R tend to have reduced transfer rates because of
weaker circulations. A bulk pond model is developed on the basis of a rectangular
geometry and an assumption of uniform mixing as suggested by the turbulence model and
pond scaling using R. Comparison of the bulk model with results from the large-eddy
simulation cases shows good agreement.
Genre Article
Identifier Skyllingstad, E. D., & Paulson, C. A. (2007). A numerical study of melt ponds. Journal of Geophysical Research, 112. doi:10.1029/2006JC003729

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