EGU24-6344, updated on 29 Apr 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-6344
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Characteristics of surface melt potential over Antarctic ice shelves based on regional atmospheric model simulations of summer air temperature extremes from 1979/80 to 2018/19

Andrew Orr1, Pranab Deb2, Kyle Clem3, Ella Gilbert1, David Bromwich4, Fredrik Boberg5, Steve Colwell1, Nicolaj Hansen5, Matthew Lazzara6, Priscilla Mooney7, Ruth Mottram5, Masashi Niwano8, Tony Phillips1, Denis Pishniak9, Carleen Reijmer10, Willem Jan van de Berg10, Stuart Webster11, and Xun Zou12
Andrew Orr et al.
  • 1British Antarctic Survey, UK (anmcr@bas.ac.uk)
  • 2Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, India
  • 3Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
  • 4Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center, The Ohio State University, USA
  • 5Danish Meteorological Institute, Denmark
  • 6University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
  • 7NORCE Norwegian Research Centre, Norway
  • 8Meteorological Research Institute, Japan Meteorological Agency, Japan
  • 9National Antarctic Scientific Center, Ukraine
  • 10Utrecht University, The Netherlands
  • 11Met Office, UK
  • 12Scripps Institution of Oceanography, USA

We calculate a regional surface “melt potential” index (MPI) over Antarctic ice shelves that describes the frequency (MPI-freq, %) and intensity (MPI-int, K) of daily maximum summer temperatures exceeding a melt threshold of 273.15 K. This is used to determine which ice shelves are vulnerable to melt-induced hydrofracture and is calculated using near-surface temperature output for each summer from 1979/80 to 2018/19 from two high-resolution regional atmospheric model hindcasts (using the MetUM and HIRHAM5). MPI is highest for Antarctic Peninsula ice shelves (MPI-freq 23-35%, MPI-int 1.2-2.1 K), lowest (2-3%, < 0 K) for Ronne-Filchner and Ross ice shelves, and around 10-24% and 0.6-1.7 K for the other West and East Antarctic ice shelves. Hotspots of MPI are apparent over many ice shelves, and they also show a decreasing trend in MPI-freq. The regional circulation patterns associated with high MPI values over West and East Antarctic ice shelves are remarkably consistent for their respective region but tied to different large-scale climate forcings. The West Antarctic circulation resembles the central Pacific El Niño pattern with a stationary Rossby wave and a strong anticyclone over the high-latitude South Pacific. By contrast, the East Antarctic circulation comprises a zonally symmetric negative Southern Annular Mode pattern with a strong regional anticyclone on the plateau and enhanced coastal easterlies/weakened Southern Ocean westerlies. Values of MPI are 3-4 times larger for a lower temperature/melt threshold of 271.15 K used in a sensitivity test, as melting can occur at temperatures lower than 273.15 K depending on snowpack properties.

How to cite: Orr, A., Deb, P., Clem, K., Gilbert, E., Bromwich, D., Boberg, F., Colwell, S., Hansen, N., Lazzara, M., Mooney, P., Mottram, R., Niwano, M., Phillips, T., Pishniak, D., Reijmer, C., van de Berg, W. J., Webster, S., and Zou, X.: Characteristics of surface melt potential over Antarctic ice shelves based on regional atmospheric model simulations of summer air temperature extremes from 1979/80 to 2018/19, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-6344, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-6344, 2024.