This image shows the average concentration
of Arctic sea ice on Feb. 25, 2022. The yellow outline shows the median sea ice
extent for the month of March, when the ice generally reaches its maximum
extent, as observed by satellites from 1981 to 2010. A median is the middle
value. That is, half of the extents were larger than the line, and half were
smaller. Credits: Joshua Stevens/NASA Earth Observatory
Arctic sea ice appeared to have hit its
annual maximum extent on Feb. 25 after growing through the fall and winter.
This year’s wintertime extent is the 10th-lowest in the satellite record
maintained by the National Snow and Ice Data Center, one of NASA’s Distributed Active Archive Centers.
Arctic sea ice extent peaked at 5.75
million square miles (14.88 million square kilometers) and is roughly 297,300
square miles (770,000 square kilometers) below the 1981-2010 average maximum –
equivalent to missing an area of ice slightly larger than Texas and Maine
combined. This maximum ties with 2015 as the third earliest on record.
Sea ice waxes and wanes with the seasons
every year. In the Arctic, it reaches its maximum extent around March after
growing through the colder months, and shrinks to its minimum extent in
September after melting through the warmer months. In the Southern Hemisphere,
Antarctic sea ice follows an opposite cycle.
To estimate sea ice extent, satellite
sensors gather sea ice data that are processed into daily images, each image
grid cell spanning an area of roughly 15 miles by 15 miles (25 kilometers by 25
kilometers). Scientists then use these images to estimate the extent of the
ocean where sea ice covers at least 15% of the water.
This graph shows Arctic
daily sea ice extent in 2022, 2021, and 2012 compared to the 1981-2010 average.
This year’s annual maximum extent was reached on Feb. 25. Credits: Joshua
Stevens/NASA Earth Observatory
Since satellites began reliably tracking sea ice in 1979, maximum extents
in the Arctic have declined at a pace of about 13% per decade, with minimum
extents declining at about 2.7% per decade. These trends are linked to warming
caused by human activities such as emitting carbon dioxide, which traps heat in the atmosphere
and causes temperatures to rise. NASA’s analysis also shows the
Arctic is warming about three times faster than other regions.
This February, Antarctic sea ice dropped to a record-low minimum extent.
But unlike in the Arctic, this sea ice has shown irregular ups and downs mainly
because of the geographical features that surround it. Winds and ocean currents
specifically linked to the Southern Ocean and Antarctica have a strong
influence on sea ice extent.
Sea ice in the Arctic is surrounded by land, whereas sea ice in the
Antarctic is surrounded only by ocean and can thus spread out more freely.
Overall, the Antarctic sea ice record shows a slightly upward – but nearly
flat – trend or increase.
Gains in Antarctic sea ice are not large enough to offset the losses of the
Arctic. The ice in both regions helps regulate global
temperatures. Even if Antarctic gains balanced sea ice
levels globally, Arctic sea ice losses could still contribute to further
regional and global warming.
Banner image: This image visualizes wintertime sea ice
change in the Arctic using data provided by the Japan Aerospace
Exploration Agency’s Global Change Observation Mission 1st-Water “SHIZUKU”
satellite, which is part of a NASA-led partnership to operate several
Earth-observing satellites. The full video can be accessed at https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/4985. Credit:
NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio
By Roberto Molar Candanosa
NASA’s Goddard Space
Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA Finds 2022 Arctic Winter Sea Ice 10th-Lowest on Record
| NASA
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