Detailed project information
| Title | : | Regional modelling of Greenland surface mass balance for key episodes in the past and future |
| Applicant | : | Prof. M.R. van den Broeke |
| Research institute | : | Universiteit Utrecht Departement Natuur- & Sterrenkunde Meteorologie & Fysische Oceanografie |
| Team members | : | Dr. W.J. van de Berg Dr. ir. J. Ettema Dhr. J.T.M. Lenaerts |
| Duration | : | 10/15/2007 tot 09/30/2011 |
| Finance | : | Eur 194.797 |
| Subsidy | : | International Polar Year - The Netherlands |
A crucial boundary condition for the accurate modelling of past, present and future volume changes of the GrIS is the surface mass balance, comprising the sum of all mass fluxes towards (solid precipitation) and away (melt, sublimation, erosion) from the ice sheet surface. Because reliable GrIS surface mass balance fields are not available, we do not know the volume of the GrIS and its contribution to sea level changes during the previous interglacial (the Eemian, 125,000 years ago) or during the last glacial maximum (LGM, some 21,000 years ago), nor can we predict with any certainty how the GrIS will behave in a (future) enhanced greenhouse climate.
In this project, the surface mass balance of the GrIS will be modelled for these key periods in the past and future. By using a regional atmospheric climate model (RACMO2), driven at the boundaries by state-of-the-art atmospheric general circulation models, this can be done at unprecedented high resolution (18 km) to match the typical resolution of ice dynamical models. Another big advantage of using a meteorological model is the availability of spatially and temporally realistic melt fluxes to study the interaction with ice dynamics. With results from this research we will be able to hindcast and predict the changes in the volume of the GrIS with much improved accuracy and with that its contribution to past and future changes in global sea level.
Articles
- et al, Prof. M.R. van den Broeke (2011). Towards direct coupling of regional climate models and ice sheet models by mass balance grafdients: application to the Greenland Ice Sheet. The Cryosphere discuss.. pp. 5-2115-2157
- et al, Dr. W.J. van de Berg (2011). Significant contribution of insolatoin to Eemian melting of the Greenland ice sheet. Natue Geoscience. pp. 10.1038/1245
