scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Aerial observations of the evolution of ice surface conditions during summer

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In the summer of 1998, a program of aerial photography was carried out at the main site of the Surface Heat Budget of the Arctic Ocean (SHEBA) program at altitudes ranging from 1220 to 1830 m as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
[1] During spring and summer, the Arctic pack ice cover undergoes a dramatic change in surface conditions, evolving from a uniform, reflective surface to a heterogeneous mixture of bare ice, melt ponds, and leads. This transformation is accompanied by a significant decrease in areally averaged, integrated albedo. The key factors contributing to this reduction in albedo are the melting of the snow cover, the formation and growth of the melt ponds, and the increase in the open water fraction. To document these changes and enable quantification of the evolution of the ponds throughout the melt season, a program of aerial photography was carried out at the main site of the Surface Heat Budget of the Arctic Ocean (SHEBA) program. A modified square pattern, 50 km on a side, surrounding the SHEBA site was flown at altitudes ranging from 1220 to 1830 m. Twelve of these aerial survey photography flights were completed between 20 May and 4 October 1998. The flights took place at approximately weekly intervals at the height of the melt season, with occasional gaps as long as 3 weeks during August and September due to persistent low clouds and fog. In addition, flights on 17 May and 25 July were flown in a closely spaced pattern designed to provide complete photo coverage of a 10-km square centered on the SHEBA main site. Images from all flights were scanned at high resolution and archived on CD-ROMs. Using personal computer image processing software, we have measured ice concentration, melt pond coverage, statistics on size and shape of melt ponds, lead fraction, and lead perimeter for the summer melt season. The ponds began forming in early June, and by the height of the melt season in early August the pond fraction exceeded 0.20. The temporal evolution of pond fraction displayed a rapid increase in mid-June, followed by a sharp decline 1 week later. After the decline, the pond fraction gradually increased until mid-August when the ponds began to freeze. By mid-September the surface of virtually all of the ponds had frozen. The open water fraction varied between 0.02 and 0.05 from May through the end of July. In early August the open water fraction jumped to 0.20 in just a few days owing to ice divergence. Melt ponds were ubiquitous during summer, with number densities increasing from 1000 to 5000 ponds per square kilometer between June and August.

read more

Citations
More filters

Sea ice rheologies for large-scale models

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the elasto-brittle rheology to simulate the complex behavior of the Arctic ice pack and used it for a better integration in classical sea ice models.

Determination of Arctic melt pond fraction and sea ice roughness from Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) imagery

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used threshold discrimination and three-dimensional modeling to estimate a melt pond fraction of 1.63% and a regionally averaged surface roughness of 0.12 for the study area.
Dissertation

A Geophysical Investigation of the Arctic Sea Ice Surface

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the recent geophysical changes of the Arctic sea ice surface, giving emphasis to snow, melt ponds, and surface topography through the three following papers: (1) interdecadal changes in spring snow depth, (2) seasonal evolution of melt ponds and (3) the spatial scaling of melt pond distributions.
Posted ContentDOI

The contribution of melt ponds to enhanced Arctic sea-ice melt during the Last Interglacial

TL;DR: The Hadley Centre Global Environment Model version 3 (HadGEM3) is the first coupled climate model to simulate an ice-free Arctic during the Last Interglacial (LIG), 127 000 years ago as mentioned in this paper.

Remote Sensing of Open Water Fraction and Melt Ponds in the Beaufort Sea Using Machine Learning Algorithms

TL;DR: A prototype algorithm using Linear Support Vector Machines is presented designed to quantify the evolution of melt pond fraction from a recently government-declassified high-resolution panchromatic optical dataset, in an area where several in-situ instruments were deployed by the British Antarctic Survey in joint with the Marginal Ice Zone Program from April-September, 2014.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Transient Responses of a Coupled Ocean–Atmosphere Model to Gradual Changes of Atmospheric CO2. Part I. Annual Mean Response

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the response of a climate model to a gradual increase or decrease of atmospheric carbon dioxide in a general circulation model of the coupled atmosphere-ocean-land surface system with global geography and seasonal variation of insulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Optical Properties of Ice and Snow in the Arctic Basin

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured light transmission and reflection on first-year sea ice near Point Barrow, Alaska, and on multi-year ice near Fletcher's Ice Island in the Beaufort Sea (lat. 84° N., long. 77°W.).
Related Papers (5)