Abstract
A scaling analysis of the deformation of Arctic sea ice over a 3-day time period is performed for scales of 10 to 1000 km. The deformation field is derived from satellite radar data; it allows us to study how a very large solid body—the Arctic sea-ice cover—deforms under the action of heterogeneous forcing winds and ocean currents. The deformation is strongly localized at small scales, and can be characterized as multifractal. This behavior is well known for turbulent flows, and is here also observed for a deforming solid. A multiscaling extrapolation to the meter scale (laboratory scale) shows that, at the 3-day time scale, about of the deformation is larger than , implying brittle failure, over of the total area.
- Received 7 November 2003
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.93.178501
©2004 American Physical Society