A dynamical network model for melt ponds on sea ice
(2025)
Hydrodynamic interactions significantly effect frazil ice crystal collisions in the ocean
Copernicus Publications (2025)
Stochastic model for the turbulent ocean heat flux under Arctic sea ice
Physical Review E: Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics American Physical Society 111 (2025) 025101
Abstract:
The physics of planetary climate features a variety of complex systems that are challenging to model as they feature turbulent flows. A key example is the heat flux from the upper ocean to the underside of sea ice which provides a key contribution to the evolution of the Arctic sea ice cover. Here, we develop a model of the turbulent ice-ocean heat flux using coupled ordinary stochastic differential equations to model fluctuations in the vertical velocity and temperature in the Arctic mixed layer. All the parameters in the model are determined from observational data. A detailed comparison between the model results and measurements made during the Surface Heat Budget of the Arctic Ocean (SHEBA) project reveals that the model is able to capture the probability density functions (PDFs) of velocity, temperature and heat flux fluctuations. Furthermore, we show that the temperature in the upper layer of the Arctic ocean can be treated as a passive scalar during the whole year of SHEBA measurements. The stochastic model developed here provides a computationally inexpensive way to compute an observationally consistent PDF of this heat flux, and has implications for its parametrization in regional and global climate models.A potential mushy source for the geysers of enceladus and other icy satellites
Geophysical Research Letters Wiley 52:3 (2025) e2024GL111929
Abstract:
Enceladus is a target for astrobiology due to the H2O plume ejecta measured by the Cassinispacecraft and the inferred subsurface ocean that could be the source of the geysers. Here we explore analternative where shear heating along tiger stripe fractures produces partial melting in the ice shell andinterstitial convection allows fluid to be ejected as geysers. We use an idealized two鈥恉imensional reactivetransport model to simulate a mushy region generated by an upper鈥恇ound estimate for the localized shearheating rate. We find that the rate of internal melting could potentially match the observed eruption rate. Thecomposition of the liquid brine would be, however, distinct from that of the ocean, due to fractionation duringpartial melting. This shear heating mechanism for geyser formation could apply to Enceladus and other icymoons and has implications for our understanding of the geophysical processes and astrobiological potential oficy satellites.Structure of mushy layers grown from perfectly and imperfectly conducting boundaries. Part 1. Diffusive solidification
Journal of Fluid Mechanics Cambridge University Press 1002 (2025) A25