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  4. A glacier-ocean interaction model for tsunami genesis due to iceberg calving
 
research article

A glacier-ocean interaction model for tsunami genesis due to iceberg calving

Wolper, Joshuah
•
Gao, Ming
•
Luthi, Martin P.
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June 21, 2021
Communications Earth & Environment

Dynamic glacier fracture and the subsequent generation and propagation of iceberg-induced tsunamis are reproduced using a unified numerical glacier-ocean model, in line with observations at the Eqip Sermia glacier in Greenland, as well as laboratory experiments.

Glaciers calving icebergs into the ocean significantly contribute to sea-level rise and can trigger tsunamis, posing severe hazards for coastal regions. Computational modeling of such multiphase processes is a great challenge involving complex solid-fluid interactions. Here, a new continuum damage Material Point Method has been developed to model dynamic glacier fracture under the combined effects of gravity and buoyancy, as well as the subsequent propagation of tsunami-like waves induced by released icebergs. We reproduce the main features of tsunamis obtained in laboratory experiments as well as calving characteristics, the iceberg size, tsunami amplitude and wave speed measured at Eqip Sermia, an ocean-terminating outlet glacier of the Greenland ice sheet. Our hybrid approach constitutes important progress towards the modeling of solid-fluid interactions, and has the potential to contribute to refining empirical calving laws used in large-scale earth-system models as well as to improve hazard assessments and mitigation measures in coastal regions, which is essential in the context of climate change.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s43247-021-00179-7
Web of Science ID

WOS:000665077400001

Author(s)
Wolper, Joshuah
Gao, Ming
Luthi, Martin P.
Heller, Valentin
Vieli, Andreas
Jiang, Chenfanfu
Gaume, Johan  
Date Issued

2021-06-21

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE

Published in
Communications Earth & Environment
Volume

2

Issue

1

Start page

130

Subjects

Environmental Sciences

•

Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

•

Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

•

Environmental Sciences & Ecology

•

Geology

•

ice

•

waves

•

stability

•

momentum

•

element

•

future

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SLAB  
Available on Infoscience
July 17, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/180093
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