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CATEGORIES:Polar Conferences, Meetings and Events
CREATED:20170609T143750
SUMMARY:Multi-scale Modeling of Sea Ice Characteristics and Behavior
LOCATION:Cambridge\, United Kingdom
DESCRIPTION:Call for Registration: Multi-scale Modeling of Sea Ice Characteristics and 
 Behavior; Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences\n11-15 September
  2017, Cambridge, United Kingdom\n \nThis workshop will address sea ice pro
 cesses across a wide range of lengths and time scales, with an emphasis on 
 understanding emergent and scale-invariant phenomena. Mathematical methods 
 that account for the smaller scale processes and enable computation and ana
 lysis of these processes' effect on larger scales relevant for coarse-grain
 ed climate models will be a focus of the workshop and linkage of scales is 
 a central theme of this workshop.\nRegistration deadline: Sunday, 11 June 2
 017.\nWorkshop Theme:\nRealistic models of Earth's climate system are essen
 tial to making projections about what we may experience as our climate chan
 ges. Polar sea ice forms a critical system component which must be accurate
 ly accounted for in global climate models. It forms the thin boundary layer
  coupling the polar oceans and atmosphere and has seen rather dramatic chan
 ges over the past two or three decades. An important feature of sea ice is 
 that it displays rich structure and behavior on scales ranging over 10 orde
 rs of magnitude, length scales from microns to hundreds of kilometers, and 
 time scales from milliseconds to decades. This broad range of scales for se
 a ice structure and properties is relevant to biological, chemical, industr
 ial, weather, and climate-related processes. It also leads to sea ice struc
 ture at certain scales being similar to other materials such as porous huma
 n bone and polycrystalline metals, which can be used to bring new technique
 s to studying sea ice.\nThe complex behavior of sea ice over such a large r
 ange of scales presents a fundamental challenge to modeling these systems. 
 For example, many key processes, whose relevant length scales may be centim
 eters or meters to kilometers, impact climate and must be incorporated into
  largescale numerical climate models with grid sizes often on the order of 
 tens of kilometers. Moreover, some sea ice properties exhibit scale invaria
 nce or predictable scale dependence while others appear to be wholly emerge
 nt, a consequence of interacting processes within and applied to the ice co
 ver.\nPotential workshop topics include:\n- Large-scale numerical models of
  the evolution of polar sea ice;\n- Sea ice simulations including variabili
 ty, predictability, and climate projections;\n- Sea ice microphysics, fluid
  transport, convection, and the porous brine microstructure;\n- Melt ponds 
 on Arctic sea ice;\n- Ice thickness distribution, melting, freezing, mechan
 ical redistribution, ridging, and rafting;\n- Waves in the marginal ice zon
 e;\n- Scaling in sea ice fracture and dynamics, sea ice rheology;\n- Moment
 um balance including form drag, interactions with currents, tides and winds
 ;\n- Sea ice thermodynamics and exchange processes;\n- Low order models of 
 polar climate;\n- Tipping point phenomena; and\n- Stochastic processes in s
 ea ice modeling.\nFor more information about the workshop and to apply for 
 registration, go to: https://www.newton.ac.uk/event/sipw01.\nFor questions,
  contact:\nDaniel Feltham\nEmail: This email address is being protected fro
 m spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
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X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p style="text-align: center;"><strong><span style="color: #000000; font-fa
 mily: Helvetica; font-size: 12px; font-style: normal; letter-spacing: norma
 l; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: 
 normal; word-spacing: 0px; float: none;">Call for Registration: Multi-scale
  Modeling of Sea Ice Characteristics and Behavior; Isaac Newton Institute f
 or Mathematical Sciences<br />11-15 September 2017, Cambridge, United Kingd
 om</span></strong></p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>This workshop will address sea ice pr
 ocesses across a wide range of lengths and time scales, with an emphasis on
  understanding emergent and scale-invariant phenomena. Mathematical methods
  that account for the smaller scale processes and enable computation and an
 alysis of these processes' effect on larger scales relevant for coarse-grai
 ned climate models will be a focus of the workshop and linkage of scales is
  a central theme of this workshop.</p><p><strong>Registration deadline: Sun
 day, 11 June 2017.</strong></p><p><em>Workshop Theme:</em></p><p>Realistic 
 models of Earth's climate system are essential to making projections about 
 what we may experience as our climate changes. Polar sea ice forms a critic
 al system component which must be accurately accounted for in global climat
 e models. It forms the thin boundary layer coupling the polar oceans and at
 mosphere and has seen rather dramatic changes over the past two or three de
 cades. An important feature of sea ice is that it displays rich structure a
 nd behavior on scales ranging over 10 orders of magnitude, length scales fr
 om microns to hundreds of kilometers, and time scales from milliseconds to 
 decades. This broad range of scales for sea ice structure and properties is
  relevant to biological, chemical, industrial, weather, and climate-related
  processes. It also leads to sea ice structure at certain scales being simi
 lar to other materials such as porous human bone and polycrystalline metals
 , which can be used to bring new techniques to studying sea ice.</p><p>The 
 complex behavior of sea ice over such a large range of scales presents a fu
 ndamental challenge to modeling these systems. For example, many key proces
 ses, whose relevant length scales may be centimeters or meters to kilometer
 s, impact climate and must be incorporated into largescale numerical climat
 e models with grid sizes often on the order of tens of kilometers. Moreover
 , some sea ice properties exhibit scale invariance or predictable scale dep
 endence while others appear to be wholly emergent, a consequence of interac
 ting processes within and applied to the ice cover.</p><p><em>Potential wor
 kshop topics include:</em></p><p>- Large-scale numerical models of the evol
 ution of polar sea ice;<br />- Sea ice simulations including variability, p
 redictability, and climate projections;<br />- Sea ice microphysics, fluid 
 transport, convection, and the porous brine microstructure;<br />- Melt pon
 ds on Arctic sea ice;<br />- Ice thickness distribution, melting, freezing,
  mechanical redistribution, ridging, and rafting;<br />- Waves in the margi
 nal ice zone;<br />- Scaling in sea ice fracture and dynamics, sea ice rheo
 logy;<br />- Momentum balance including form drag, interactions with curren
 ts, tides and winds;<br />- Sea ice thermodynamics and exchange processes;<
 br />- Low order models of polar climate;<br />- Tipping point phenomena; a
 nd<br />- Stochastic processes in sea ice modeling.</p><p>For more informat
 ion about the workshop and to apply for registration, go to: <a href="https
 ://www.newton.ac.uk/event/sipw01">https://www.newton.ac.uk/event/sipw01</a>
 .</p><p>For questions, contact:<br />Daniel Feltham<br />Email: <span id="c
 loakd1b316f993c44f2a5bb0a5e8d12d0a54">This email address is being protected
  from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.</span><script type=
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CONTACT:This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
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DTSTAMP:20260430T083817Z
DTSTART;TZID=UTC;VALUE=DATE:20170911
DTEND;TZID=UTC;VALUE=DATE:20170916
SEQUENCE:0
TRANSP:OPAQUE
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