Channelization of plumes beneath ice shelves
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Accepted version
Author(s)
Dallaston, MC
Hewitt, IJ
Wells, AJ
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
We study a simplified model of ice–ocean interaction beneath a floating ice shelf, and investigate the possibility for channels to form in the ice shelf base due to spatial variations in conditions at the grounding line. The model combines an extensional thin-film description of viscous ice flow in the shelf, with melting at its base driven by a turbulent ocean plume. Small transverse perturbations to the one-dimensional steady state are considered, driven either by ice thickness or subglacial discharge variations across the grounding line. Either forcing leads to the growth of channels downstream, with melting driven by locally enhanced ocean velocities, and thus heat transfer. Narrow channels are smoothed out due to turbulent mixing in the ocean plume, leading to a preferred wavelength for channel growth. In the absence of perturbations at the grounding line, linear stability analysis suggests that the one-dimensional state is stable to initial perturbations, chiefly due to the background ice advection.
Date Issued
2015-12-03
Date Acceptance
2015-10-19
Citation
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 2015, 785, pp.109-134
ISSN
1469-7645
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Start Page
109
End Page
134
Journal / Book Title
Journal of Fluid Mechanics
Volume
785
Copyright Statement
The final publication is available via Cambridge Journals Online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2015.609
Subjects
geophysical and geological flows
ice sheets
morphological instability
Publication Status
Published