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
- 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.