Crandles,
The salinity of the ice is stated in table 1 to be 1 per mil, thus brine leakage and freshening as ice ages simply doesn't seem to occur in PIOMAS, as the Zhang 2003 paper cites Winton 2000 with regards the 2 layer (+1 layer snow) sea ice component.
This means that the post 2010 spring melt must be related solely to thinning, not to impacts on age or implied physical characteristics. There are three papers, the maths is borderline beyond me - it's over 20 years since I dealt with a differential equation. Otherwise the best way would be to use the papers to make a column model of 1 cell, and apply warming to various different initial thicknesses.
The thing is we know brine rejection with aging strengthens and freshens ice in the real world. Does this suggest that this isn't an important process in the overall picture, given that PIOMAS seems to be doing quite well? I suspect an implicit inclusion of this in the treatment of ice thickness, but that's a really thorny batch of interlinked equations.
Terry M,
I'm not sure about that. There is no accounting for ice ageing and freshening in PIOMAS, but treatment of thickness may have some implicit mechanical effects. The Winton paper I've just read really only deals with thermodynamics. I didn't think temperature affected ice salinity, I thought it was mechanical deformation and age that allow the brine to drain.
Ice Cool Kim,
In Hibler 1980, Modelling a Variable Thickness Sea Ice Cover, albedo is in two states: ice or snow. I don't recall reading about further complexity being added in the other papers PIOMAS is based on. This might explain why after the Spring Melt the PIOMAS anomalies indicate less ice loss than climatology, which in turn might imply more volume loss during the late summer than PIOMAS shows.
However as with that Hibler paper, a lot of the older papers are image PDFs so I can't search the pdf easily for key words. And my memory isn't excellent.