Because of their capacity to alter floe size distribution and concentration and consequently to influence atmosphere-ocean fluxes, there is a compelling justification and demand to include waves in ice/ocean models and earth system models. Similarly, global wave forecasting models like WAVEWATCH IIIR need better parametrizations to capture the effects of a sea ice cover such as the marginal ice zone on incoming wave energy. Most parametrizations of wave propagation in sea ice assume without question that the frequency-dependent attenuation which is observed to occur with distance x travelled is exponential, i.e. A = A0 e−αx. This is the solution of the simple first-order linear ordinary differential equation dA/dx = −αA, which follows from an Airy wave mode ansatz A exp i(kx ± ωt). Yet, in point of fact, it now appears that exponential decay may not be observed consistently and a more general equation of the type dA/dx = −αAn is proposed to allow for a broader range of attenuation behaviours should this be necessary to fit data.
CITATION STYLE
Squire, V. A. (2018). A fresh look at how ocean waves and sea ice interact. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 376(2129). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2017.0342
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