Modelling the reorientation of sea-ice faults as the wind changes direction
Data(s) |
2011
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Resumo |
A discrete-element model of sea ice is used to study how a 90° change in wind direction alters the pattern of faults generated through mechanical failure of the ice. The sea-ice domain is 400km in size and consists of polygonal floes obtained through a Voronoi tessellation. Initially the floes are frozen together through viscous–elastic joints that can break under sufficient compressive, tensile and shear deformation. A constant wind-stress gradient is applied until the initially frozen ice pack is broken into roughly diamond-shaped aggregates, with crack angles determined by wing-crack formation. Then partial refreezing of the cracks delineating the aggregates is modelled through reduction of their length by a particular fraction, the ice pack deformation is neglected and the wind stress is rotated by 90°. New cracks form, delineating aggregates with a different orientation. Our results show the new crack orientation depends on the refrozen fraction of the initial faults: as this fraction increases, the new cracks gradually rotate to the new wind direction, reaching 90° for fully refrozen faults. Such reorientation is determined by a competition between new cracks forming at a preferential angle determined by the wing-crack theory and at old cracks oriented at a less favourable angle but having higher stresses due to shorter contacts across the joints |
Formato |
text |
Identificador |
http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/34582/1/Wilchinsky_etal_2011b.pdf Wilchinsky, A. V., Feltham, D. L. <http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/view/creators/90004991.html> and Hopkins, M. A. (2011) Modelling the reorientation of sea-ice faults as the wind changes direction. Annals of Glaciology, 52 (57). pp. 83-90. ISSN 1727-5644 |
Idioma(s) |
en |
Publicador |
International Glaciological Society |
Relação |
http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/34582/ creatorInternal Feltham, D. L. |
Tipo |
Article PeerReviewed |