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Sea Level Rise and Small Glaciers

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Title: Sea Level Rise and Small Glaciers


1
Sea Level Rise and Small Glaciers
  • The math and physics behind the science

2
The Math is There
  • See many claims about climate change.
  • Rarely get to see the derivations leading to
    those claims.
  • This lecture will show the math that lets us
    predict sea-level rise due to melting mountain
    glaciers.
  • Primarily based on
  • Bahr, Meier and Peckham, The physical basis of
    glacier volume-area scaling, 1997.
  • Bahr, Global distributions of glacier properties
    A stochastic scaling paradigm, 1997.

3
Cant Show Everything
  • My goal is to convince you that climate change
    science is based on real math and physics.
  • No arm waving necessary!
  • So Ill derive the technique but wont finish the
    actual application.
  • Actual application requires analyzing oodles of
    satellite images and other data.
  • Well derive the math that shows how to analyze
    those images.
  • Alas, only have one hour.

4
Background
  • People pump greenhouse gasses into atmosphere.
  • Sun shines on Earth.
  • Greenhouse gasses trap the resulting heat.
  • Earth heats up.
  • Glaciers melt.
  • Melting water flows into oceans.
  • Oceans rise.
  • Entire island nations disappear underwater.
  • Maldives, etc.
  • Also Venice, US Gulf Coast, Bangladesh,
    Indonesia, etc.

5
How much?
  • Approx 1.7mm/year.
  • Seems small, but adds up.
  • From 1900 to 2100, thats approximately 0.5 m.
  • Church and White (2006).
  • 80 of the 1200 Maldives Islands are less than 1m
    above current sea level.
  • No more beaches, no more islands.
  • Kiss paradise goodbye. ?

Photo from National Geographic
6
Sea Level Rise Contributors
  • Its not just melting glaciers.
  • Sea level changes due to
  • Thermal expansion of the ocean.
  • Melting ice caps and ice sheets.
  • Melting mountain glaciers.
  • And host of other processes post-glacial
    rebound, groundwater pumping, ENSO (short term
    and localized), etc.

7
Sea Ice Not a Contributor
  • Polar sea ice is melting at a distressing rate.
  • Important harbinger of things to come.
  • Polar bears endangered.
  • But doesnt change sea level.
  • Sea ice is floating ice on the ocean surface.
  • Its like ice cubes in your glass of water.
  • When the ice cubes melt, the glass doesnt
    overflow.

8
Land Ice is the Culprit
  • Thermal expansion and glacier water (flowing from
    land into the oceans) causes most of the rise.
  • On decade and century time scales.
  • Well focus on glacier component.

9
Greenland and Antarctica
  • Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets are huge
    reservoirs of land ice.
  • But takes a long time to transport their water to
    the ocean.
  • Water melts at the surface.
  • Percolates down into the ice sheet.
  • Much of it refreezes in the firn (old snow)
    before reaching ocean.
  • Some of it lubricates the bottom of the glacier
    and makes it flow faster.
  • But can only flow out through a limited number of
    outlet glaciers. Restricted nozzles.

10
Skiing Across Greenland in the Name of Science
Neil Humphrey (left), Tad Pfeffer (right), and me
(photographer).
11
Measuring Percolation in Greenland
We cored a transect of Greenland to look for
meltwater that refreezes in the firn before
reaching the ocean.
12
Icebergs From Illilusat (Jakobshavn) Outlet
Glacier
Ice flows out of the Greenland Ice Sheet and into
the Atlantic, breaking off as icebergs.
13
But Mountain Glaciers are the Canaries
  • Small mountain glaciers are very susceptible to
    warming.
  • Small is a bit of a misnomer. Some are bigger
    than Rhode Island.
  • They melt rapidly (decadal time scales).
  • Of all the melting ice, 60 comes from these
    small mountain glaciers.
  • Meier et al. Science, 2007.

14
Need Volume of Mountain Glaciers
  • How much can mountain glaciers contribute to sea
    level?
  • 160,000 mountain glaciers.
  • Meier and Bahr (1996)
  • Each ones volume has to be measured.
  • Aurgh! Measuring even one glacier takes a lot of
    money, time, and people.

15
Measuring Glacier Volume
  • Can only see the surface of a glacier.
  • So have to drill holes everywhere through the
    glacier to measure volume.
  • Or have to use ground penetrating radar.

16
Weve Done That On Friendly Glaciers
Here we are drilling through the Worthington
Glacier, AK.
17
But Most Glaciers Look Like This
18
And This
Lets see you pull a drill or radar across
160,000 of these!
19
Need Remote Sensing!
  • Want a satellite to take a picture of a glacier
    and say That glacier is 100 km3.
  • And That glacier over there is 1643 km3.
  • And
  • How?
  • Measure surface area (easy with satellite) and
    convert to volume (cant measure from satellite).
  • Use fancy scaling (math) analysis.

20
Scaling Example
  • Suppose I told you glaciers look like square
    boxes.
  • All you can see is the surface of the box.

10 km
  • Whats the volume of the glacier (box)?

21
Right, And Satellites Could Do the Same Thing
  • Use satellite to measure surface area, then
    convert that to a volume.
  • Area width length
  • Volume width length height
  • Volume Area height
  • And if a glacier looks like a box, then
  • width length height
  • height (Area)1/2
  • So Volume (Area)3/2

Called a scaling relationship
22
Problem Glaciers Dont Look Like Boxes
  • Glaciers look like misshapen rectangles on a good
    day.
  • Many look like networks.
  • Like rivers or trees.
  • Glaciers have fractal topologies!
  • Bahr and Peckham (1996).
  • Thats a very complex shape where a small part of
    the shape looks like a miniature representation
    of the whole glacier.

23
Whats a Fractal?
  • Visually, a part looks like the whole.
  • A classic fractal the Sierpinski gadget.

This part looks like the whole picture when
expanded!
24
Fractal Topology
Break off one branch of the glacier network and
that branch looks like the whole glacier
(mathematically speaking).
Columbia Glacier. Photo courtesy Tad Pfeffer.
25
Can We Scale Fractal Glaciers?
  • Yes! They have complex shapes, but they do have
    a characteristic shape.
  • Consider human body.
  • Everyone is built slightly differently.
  • But humans have a characteristic
  • shape.
  • E.g., Arm span roughly equals height
  • width ? (height)1.0
  • Called a scaling relationship.
  • 1.0 is called the scaling exponent.
  • In general, when solving other problems,
  • scaling exponents can be any fractional
  • number like 1.3 or 2.4.

Consider a spherical cow
26
Glacier Scaling
  • Want volume from (fractal) area.
  • Area width length
  • Volume width length thickness
  • Assume width is proportional to length.
  • There is no reason for a glacier to prefer
    growing left or right versus forward or back.
  • Then
  • Area ? length2
  • Volume ? length length thickness

Close, but not entirely true width ? length0.6
(Bahr, 1997), but that detail isnt important
here and doesnt change our later results.
27
Length-Thickness Scaling
  • Suppose we can find a scaling relationship
    between thickness and length.
  • thickness ? lengthp (for some p).
  • Volume ? length length lengthp lengthp2
    (length2)(p2)/2
  • Volume ? (Area)(p2)/2
  • Aha! If we can find a length-thickness
    relationship, then can calculate the glacier
    volume.
  • So we use physics and calculus to find the
    correct scaling exponent p for thickness ?
    lengthp.

28
Need Glaciers Characteristic Length-Height
Scaling
  • Start with physics forces acting on glaciers.
  • Then represent with math.
  • Then derive scaling relationships from the math.
  • Then use satellites to measure area.
  • Use scaling relationships to convert to volume.
  • That gives estimate of amount of water that will
    flow into oceans and cause sea level rise.

29
Some Glacier Physics
  • Glaciers flow downhill under the influence of
    gravity.
  • Just like water in a river but much slower.
  • Think of honey oozing off of a tilted plate.

30
Glacier Flow
Surface of glacier
Mountain under the glacier
31
Hows It Really Flow?
  • Gravity creates forces.
  • To calculate these forces we use
  • Conservation of mass
  • Conservation of momentum (force balance)
  • Well start with conservation of mass.

32
Hang Onto Your Hats!
  • Ok, here comes the math that I promised!
  • Its easy.
  • Some of it may look scary.
  • But Ill never use anything more than simple
    algebra, derivatives, and integrals.

33
Conservation of Mass
  • Imagine a small box cut out of the glacier.
  • The amount of ice flowing into the box has to
    equal the amount of ice flowing out of the box.
  • Ice is incompressible, so no extra ice can be
    shoved into the box and/or stored in the box.
  • i.e., no mass disappears.

34
Small Box Cut Out of Glacier
35
Mass In and Out of Box
  • mass in mass out
  • How much mass flows in per second?
  • Its the velocity (v) times the mass.
  • The mass is density (r) times volume.

r vy(yDy)
y-axis
yDy
r vx(xDx)
r vx(x)
y
r vy(y)
x-axis
x Dx
x
And theres also a z component, r vz.
36
Mass Balance
  • Sum of all the mass in and out must equal zero.
  • mass conservation

Why DxDy? Because the mass is flowing in on that
whole side of the box. And thats the area of
the side. (Also ensures that each term has units
of mass.)
37
Divide By the Volume
  • If divide by the volume, should look familiar

Why, those are just derivatives! (Remember the
definition of a derivative?)
38
Make the Box Really Small
  • In the limit of a very small box
  • i.e., take limit as DxDyDz approaches 0.
  • Called the Continuity Equation.
  • Its just mass conservation.

39
But Mass Is Lost!
  • What if we consider a box at the surface?
  • It snows and melts at the surface.
  • Mass is lost at the surface!
  • Let b be the mass added or lost at the surface.
  • Now add up all the boxes from the bottom to the
    top of the glacier.

40
Adding Up a Column of Boxes
b
Snow melts at the surface at rate b.
41
Adding Up the Boxes
  • Remember that a sum and an integral are the same
    thing!
  • So the sum of the boxes is

42
The Mass Conservation Equation
  • Assume that the glacier has a thickness of h.
  • In other words, our stack of boxes has a height
    h.
  • Then integral becomes

What happen to the vz term? Its now b! Its
the amount of stuff leaving vertically through
the surface. And this also shrinks the height of
the glacier so we subtract dh/dt.
Technically, dh/dt comes from a dr/dt term in
the continuity equation. See me for details.
43
Ack! I Dont Get It!
  • Dont panic! Thats ok.
  • Trying to convince you that the climate change
    science isnt pulled out of thin air.
  • So my goal is to show you the math and leave out
    as little as possible!
  • If this derivation seems mysterious, its online
    where you can peruse again. Or see me. Id love
    to explain it in gory detail!
  • You can still follow the rest of this lecture if
    you accept that the equation has been properly
    derived.

44
Ugh, Make it Simpler!
  • For simplicity, well assume theres a nice
    well-defined average velocity so that the
    integral goes away.

45
Still a Mess! Can we simplify?
  • Yes, do a scaling analysis.
  • Use a technique called nondimensionalization or
    stretching symmetries.
  • If the equation is true for all glaciers, then it
    has to be true for glaciers of different sizes.
  • So lets try stretching each variable as if we
    are trying to create a bigger glacier from the
    current glacier.
  • Multiply each variable by a constant.
  • This should give back the same equation, but for
    a bigger glacier.

46
Stretching
length
  • Lets stretch
  • the variable x by a factor of la. i.e.,
    xstretched la x
  • the variable y by a factor of lb. i.e.,
    ystretched lb y
  • the variable vx by a factor of lc.
  • the variable vy by a factor of ld.
  • etc.
  • In other words, we multiply each variable by that
    amount.
  • Its like we are saying, make the glacier longer
    by a factor of la , and make the glacier wider
    by a factor of lb , etc.

width
47
Rescale and Factor
  • The original equation
  • Rescale each variable
  • Factor out the constants

48
Stretching Symmetries
  • Note that the exact same original equation has to
    apply to the bigger glacier.
  • In other words, the last equation (on previous
    slide) has to be the same as the first equation
    (on previous slide).
  • That can only happen if
  • So we have the requirements that
  • f e c - a
  • f e d - b

49
Scaling the Variables
  • Now we can really simplify!
  • lf lec-a is the same as
  • And separating,

Values for the bigger glacier
Values for the original smaller glacier
50
Scaling Relationship
  • So for any two glaciers this ratio has to be the
    same!
  • Big glaciers, small glaciers its all the same.
  • Must be some constant.
  • So all of that work reduces to

51
But Wait, Theres More
  • That was just mass conservation.
  • Now we have to do momentum conservation!
  • These are two of the most important principles in
    physics.
  • We need both to completely describe the flow of a
    glacier.

Also need energy conservation but on mountain
glaciers, the temperature is largely constant and
irrelevant.
52
Forces on the Box
  • Remember our little box cut out from the glacier?
  • Ice in the box flows due to forces.
  • Gravity
  • Pressure from overlying ice.
  • If I squish one side of a balloon, then the
    balloon bulges out on all the other sides.
  • Same with the box. If I poke at one side, then
    ice oozes out the other sides.
  • Well analyze the forces on the box to see how
    the ice flows.

53
Normal and Shear Forces
  • Two kinds of forces normal and shear.
  • Normal is straight on.
  • Like pressure.
  • Shear is along the side.
  • Like putting hand on a
  • book and pushing sideways.

Technically we are dealing with stress, or force
per unit area. But Im going to gloss over that
for the moment.
54
Shear Forces
  • Shearing a book or deck of cards.

55
Notation
  • Let sxy be the forces on the x side of the cube
    acting in the y direction.

56
All the Forces
And ditto on the other faces of our box i.e.,
we will also have szx, syz, etc.
57
All the Forces in the x-Direction
y-axis
syx (yDy)
y Dy
sxx (x)
sxx (xDx)
y
syx (y)
x-axis
x Dx
x
And ditto on the other faces of our box i.e.,
we will also have szx(x) and szx(xDx).
58
Conservation of Momentum
  • Take the sum of all the forces in the
    x-direction.
  • Tells us how much the ice will move through the
    box in the x-direction.

Why DxDy? Because this force is acting on every
part of the xy face of the box. So have to add
the force for every point on that face.
g is gravity! And r is the density of ice. We
are considering the force due to gravity acting
in the x-direction. F ma. In this case, the
acceleration is gravity g, and the mass is given
by the density times the volume of ice, DxDyDz.
59
Recognize the Derivatives?
  • Divide by the volume of the box DxDyDz.

These are just derivatives! (Remember the
definition of derivatives?)
60
Let the Box Get Really Small
  • Now take the limit as the box gets really small.
  • This is the net force, Fnet ma.
  • But wait, glaciers dont accelerate! They move
    waaay too slowly. The change in velocity is
    miniscule, negligible, insignificant. In other
    words, a 0.

61
Force Balance Equations
  • So the net force is zero!
  • And ditto in y- and z-directions.

62
Ack! I Am Soooo Lost!
  • Again, trying to be complete.
  • Want to convince you that climate change science
    is backed by the real thing.
  • No arm waving necessary.
  • But if unhappy, feel free to accept the above
    equations and then move on!
  • Can review this stuff in grad school we need
    people like you studying climate change science!

63
Again, What a Mess!
  • Can we simplify?
  • Yes, do stretching analysis again!
  • We find a whole bunch of scaling relationships.
  • Most important is
  • Wheres that a come from? Its the component of
    gravity in the x direction.

64
Huh? A Little Intuition Please!
  • g sin a is the component of gravity acting
    along the glacier.

65
Intuition
  • So is just the component of the
    gravitational force acting along the bottom of
    the glacier.
  • The shear.
  • Note sin a a

66
Strain Rates
  • The shear force causes the glacier to move by
    deforming.
  • Each unit of force causes a certain amount of
    deformation.
  • Glaciers dont accelerate, but they do have a
    velocity.
  • The rate of deformation is measured as strain
    rate. Its the change in velocity over a
    distance.

67
Strain Rate Pictures
  • For normal strain rates, deformation is only in
    one direction
  • For shears, there is deformation in two
    directions, so
  • Think of it as the rate at which the ice gets
    stretched (or compressed).

68
Non-Linear Glacier Flow Law
  • Let be the rate of deformation caused by sxz.
  • Experiments (and theory) show that

(where n 3).
The full form of the flow law is more
complicated and contains deviatoric stresses,
but this is exact for shear terms.
69
Substitute
  • Now we can substitute the strain rate for the
    stress.
  • Remember that the angle a is just rise over
    run. So

70
Combine Mass and Momentum
  • Finally, we can combine the derivations from mass
    and momentum conservation!
  • Recall,
  • And
  • Together,

71
Need to Use An Observation
  • From data, we know that the amount of melting at
    the surface increases as a parabola with distance
    down a glacier.
  • Bahr and Dyurgerov (1999).

72
Thickness Scales With Length
  • Substituting gives
  • This is like the persons height scaling with
    their arm span. But the scaling exponent is
    different.
  • (n3)/(2n2) instead of 1.

73
Volume and Area
  • Finally we can get volume from surface area!

(Recall that n 3.)
74
THATS IT!
  • Weve just derived the volume from the surface
    area.

That aint no standard box! Remember the box
was Volume Area1.5.
p.s. Scaling constant (0.034 in units of km to a
nasty power) comes from some observations.
75
And Data Backs It Up!
  • Remember I said we did field work on a few nice
    glaciers?
  • Heres a log-log plot of volume versus area for
    144 glaciers.
  • The regression is 1.36, very close to the
    theorys 1.375.
  • From Bahr, Meier, and Peckham (1997).

76
And Sea-Level Rise?
  • So now, satellites can measure surface area of
    each glacier.
  • All 160,000.
  • Then the area of each glacier is converted to a
    volume with the volume-area scaling relationship.
  • Then this tells us how much ice can melt into the
    oceans!
  • 0.1 to 0.25 meters by 2100.
  • Meier et al., Science, 2007.
  • Phew!

77
So Now You Know
  • Ok, now you know the kind of math and physics
    that goes behind the climate change science.
  • But this is only a very small part of the big
    picture!
  • You can spend a long time learning all the
    details of the climate models.

78
We Need More People Doing This Kind of Climate
Change Science!
Interested?
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