Bulletin of the American Physical Society
77th Annual Meeting of the Division of Fluid Dynamics
Sunday–Tuesday, November 24–26, 2024; Salt Lake City, Utah
Session X26: Geophysical Fluid Dynamics: Cryosphere
8:00 AM–10:23 AM,
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
Room: 251 D
Chair: Yue Meng, Stanford University
Abstract: X26.00003 : 3D Discrete Element Model and Continuum Theory for Granular Flow of Ice Mélange
8:26 AM–8:39 AM
Presenter:
Yue Meng
(Stanford University)
Authors:
Yue Meng
(Stanford University)
Riley Culberg
(Cornell University)
Michael Shahin
(The University of Kansas)
Leigh Stearns
(The University of Kansas)
Justin C Burton
(Emory University)
Kavinda Nissanka
(Emory University)
Ching-Yao Lai
(Stanford University)
To quantify the buttressing force, previous work has developed 2D discrete element models (DEM) to model mélange as a 2D floating granular material. However, lab experiments and observations suggest that mélange thickness varies along the flow and deviate from a 2D granular pack. Here we develop the first 3D DEM that simulates a moving terminus pushing against a collection of cubic icebergs confined within a channel. We also examine the effect of realistic fjord geometry of two Greenland tidewater glaciers. The mélange near the glacier terminus moves at the terminus velocity with shear bands developed at fjord walls. The modeled velocity field showcases both uniform and extensional flow regimes that are consistent with remote observations. We developed a 3D continuum theory that resembles shallow shelf approximation to describe the flow of ice mélange. We validated the continuum theory by DEM simulations and found that the driving stress induced by the mélange thickness gradient is predominantly balanced by the fjord friction resisting the granular flow. The resulting analytical model reveals that the buttressing force depends on the square of the mélange thickness, and the thickness decays exponentially from the terminus, exhibiting excellent agreement with 3D DEM simulations. Finally, from remote observations across 32 Greenland glacier termini, we find thick mélange when terminus advances in winter, and thin mélange when terminus retreats in summer, that can be explained by the seasonal varying mélange buttressing force predicted from our models.
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