Taylor & Francis Group
Browse
tcej_a_2283243_sm8522.bib (12.66 kB)

Observation of wave propagation over 1,000 km into Antarctica winter pack ice

Download (12.66 kB)
dataset
posted on 2023-12-02, 07:40 authored by Takehiko Nose, Tomotaka Katsuno, Takuji Waseda, Shuki Ushio, Jean Rabault, Tsubasa Kodaira, Joey Voermans

A drifting wave-ice buoy (Medusa-766) was deployed at the Lützow-Holm Bay (LHB) marginal ice zone in Antarctica during the 63rd Japanese Antarctic Research Expedition to study the wave influence on the unstable LHB fast ice. Medusa-766 survived the Antarctic winter as it was located deep in the ice cover with the shortest distance to the ice-free Southern Ocean over 1,000 km; at this time, there was evidence of 8-cm-height wave signal at the buoy position. Using the the ECMWF’s reanalysis wave data, we show that the incoming waves were likely 4-m waves that were generated by an extratropical cyclone in the Southern Ocean. Wave-induced ice breakup potential for this event could extend hundreds of kilometres into the ice field. When Medusa-766 was in LHB in the summer months, it did not detect sizable wave energy despite the low sea ice concentration extent even during on-ice wave events. Understanding the wave attenuation characteristics is needed to elucidate the ocean wave effect to the unstable LHB fast ice. The success of Medusa-766 demonstrates the robustness of the general design and the high sensitivity of the sensor used, which is promising for future LHB wave–ice interaction research.

Funding

This work was a part of the Arctic Challenge for Sustainability II (ArCS II) Project (Program Grant Number JPMXD1420318865).A part of this study was also conducted under JSPS KAKENHI Grant Numbers JP 19H00801, 19H05512, 21K14357, and 22H00241.

History