Esa's Cryosat sees Arctic sea-ice volume bounce back
BBC,
16 December, 2013
The
bounce back in the extent of sea ice in the Arctic this summer was
reflected also in the volume of ice.
Data
from Europe's
Cryosat spacecraft
suggests there were almost 9,000 cu km of ice at the end of this
year's melt season.
This
is close to 50% more than in the corresponding period in 2012.
It
is a rare piece of good news for a region that has witnessed a rapid
decline in both area cover and thickness in recent years.
But
scientists caution against reading too much into one year's
"recovery".
"Although
the recovery of Arctic sea ice is certainly welcome news, it has to
be considered against the backdrop of changes that have occurred over
the last few decades," said Prof Andy Shepherd of University
College London, UK.
"It's
estimated that there were around 20,000 cu km of Arctic sea ice each
October in the early 1980s, and so today's minimum still ranks among
the lowest of the past 30 years," he told BBC News.
Cryosat
is the European Space Agency's (Esa) dedicated polar monitoring
platform.
It
has a sophisticated radar system that allows scientists to work out
the thickness of the ice floes covering the Arctic Ocean.
In
the three years following its launch, the spacecraft saw a steady
decline in autumn ice volume, with a record low of 6,000 cubic km
being recorded in late October 2012.
But
after a sharply colder summer this year, the autumn volume number has
gone up.
Measurements
taken in the same three weeks in October found the floes to contain
just shy of 9,000 cu km.
Thicker
ice has been retained in the Arctic
Part
of this stronger performance can be put down to the greater retention
of older ice.
This
is evident particularly around the Canadian archipelago and North
Greenland, where there is much more two-year-old and three-year-old
ice than in previous years.
"One
of the things we'd noticed in our data was that the volume of ice
year-to-year was not varying anything like as much as the ice extent
- at least for the years 2010, 2011 and 2012," explained Rachel
Tilling from the UK's Nerc Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling
(CPOM).
"This
is why we're really quite surprised by what we've seen in 2013.
"We
didn't expect the greater ice extent left at the end of the summer
melt to be reflected in the volume.
"But
it has been. And the reason is related to the amount of multi-year
ice in the Arctic."
Dr
Don Perovich is a sea-ice expert at Dartmouth College, US.
He
said Cryosat's data tallied with observations made by other
spacecraft.
"In
previous summers, some of the [multi-year ice] migrated over to the
Alaska and Siberia areas where it melted. But this past summer, it
stayed in place because of a change in wind patterns. And so there'll
likely be more multi-year ice next year than there was this year,"
he told BBC News.
Satellite
altimetry: How to measure sea-ice volume
Cryosat's
radar has the resolution to see the Arctic's floes and leads
Some
7/8 of the ice tends to sit below the waterline - the draft
The
aim is to measure the freeboard - the ice part above the waterline
Knowing
this 1/8th figure allows Cryosat to work out sea-ice thickness
The
thickness multiplied by the area of ice cover produces a volume
The
minimum ice extent in the Arctic this summer was recorded as 5.10
million sq km. Again, this was a figure almost 50% larger than the
all-time satellite-low mark achieved 12 months previously - when
floes were reduced to just 3.41 million sq km by mid-September.
Area/extent
is easier to measure, but scientists regard thickness/volume to be
the best metric with which to judge the health of the ice pack, which
is why Cryosat's unique data-set is so important.
For
a while, it was uncertain whether the European satellite would get
any autumn measurements this year.
The
spacecraft suffered a major fault in its onboard power system at the
beginning of October, and all science activity was halted.
But
engineers managed to switch the satellite over to a back-up system
and normal operations were resumed on 11 October.
"We
lost the side 'A' of the power subsystem we believe for good,
although we still have hope to be able to use part of it in the
future in case we experience another issue," said Esa Cryosat
mission manager Dr Tommaso Parrinello.
"Since
2 October, we have been operating on the redundant chain, but all
other subsystems are still being operated on their prime chain 'A'.
Therefore, the science instruments and the quality of data have not
been affected."
The
new Cryosat study was presented here in San Francisco to the American
Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting,
where the annual
Arctic Report Card
was released.
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