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Drift, Deformation, and Fracture of Sea Ice - A Perspective Across Scales (Paperback, 2013 ed.) Loot Price: R1,481
Discovery Miles 14 810
Drift, Deformation, and Fracture of Sea Ice - A Perspective Across Scales (Paperback, 2013 ed.): Jerome Weiss

Drift, Deformation, and Fracture of Sea Ice - A Perspective Across Scales (Paperback, 2013 ed.)

Jerome Weiss

Series: SpringerBriefs in Earth Sciences

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Loot Price R1,481 Discovery Miles 14 810 | Repayment Terms: R139 pm x 12*

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Sea ice is a major component of polar environments, especially in the Arctic where it covers the entire Arctic Ocean throughout most of the year. However, in the context of climate change, the Arctic sea ice cover has been declining significantly over the last decades, either in terms of its concentration or thickness. The sea ice cover evolution and climate change are strongly coupled through the albedo positive feedback, thus possibly explaining the Arctic amplification of climate warming. In addition to thermodynamics, sea ice kinematics (drift, deformation) appears as an essential factor in the evolution of the ice cover through a reduction of the average ice age (and consequently of the cover's thickness), or ice export out of the Arctic. This is a first motivation for a better understanding of the kinematical and mechanical processes of sea ice. A more upstream, theoretical motivation is a better understanding of the brittle deformation of geophysical objects across a wide range of scales. Indeed, owing to its very strong kinematics, compared e.g. to the Earth s crust, an unrivaled kinematical data set is available for sea ice from in situ (e.g. drifting buoys) or satellite observations. Here, we review the recent advances in the understanding of sea ice drift, deformation and fracturing obtained from these data. We focus particularly on the scaling properties in time and scale that characterize these processes, and we emphasize the analogies that can be drawn from the deformation of the Earth s crust. These scaling properties, which are the signature of long-range elastic interactions within the cover, constrain future developments in the modeling of sea ice mechanics. We also show that kinematical and rheological variables such as average velocity, average strain-rate or strength have significantly changed over the last decades, accompanying and actually accelerating the Arctic sea ice decline.

General

Imprint: Springer
Country of origin: Netherlands
Series: SpringerBriefs in Earth Sciences
Release date: March 2013
First published: 2013
Authors: Jerome Weiss
Dimensions: 235 x 155 x 5mm (L x W x T)
Format: Paperback
Pages: 83
Edition: 2013 ed.
ISBN-13: 978-9400762015
Categories: Books > Professional & Technical > Environmental engineering & technology > General
Books > Science & Mathematics > Physics > Applied physics & special topics > Geophysics
Books > Earth & environment > Earth sciences > The hydrosphere > Oceanography (seas)
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LSN: 9400762011
Barcode: 9789400762015

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