Melt Ponds, Summer Ice, and More: Space Laser Measures Changing Earth
Arctic sea ice has lost about a third of its volume since
2003. At the other pole, new glacial lakes were discovered deep below the
surface of Antarctic ice. At latitudes in between, changing water levels in reservoirs revealed human
influences.
Those are just a few of the 100-plus new
findings made with precise height data from the 12 trillion laser measurements
collected from NASA’s Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite-2 (ICESat-2).
Since its September 2018 launch, ICESat-2
has gathered data and inspired research on our changing Earth – ranging from
ice to tropical beaches, boreal forests to urban areas. Before launch, mission science team
members talked of
what they hoped it would help us understand. Now, the mission has the green
light to continue operation after successfully completing its three-year
primary mission, and these ice scientists share what it has revealed.
ICESat-2 measurements provide an incredible
level of precision as it measures Earth's surface, including the Antarctic ice
sheet seen here. Credits: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/Kate
Ramsayer
Ice and Beyond
Alex Gardner, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Southern California
“I’m truly amazed at the engineering of
ICESat-2. We’re counting individual photons bouncing off the surface of Earth –
with incredible precision. And the science that is flowing from it is
incredible. Right away, we saw changes in the Antarctic and
Greenland ice sheets,
the influence of the ocean eating away at the ice and melting the surface in
Greenland.
“But what has also really stood out is the
diversity of scientific fields using ICESat-2. It spans ocean science,
hydrology, the cryosphere, the biosphere – I knew there would be a lot of ways
of using the data, but I don’t think I anticipated how quickly that would
happen. I’m looking forward
to the tsunami of studies coming.”
A
glacier on the Antarctic Peninsula flows into the Bellingshausen Sea, as seen
from a flight of the Operation Ice Bridge airborne mission, used to calibrate
and validate ICESat-2 data. Credits: NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center/Kate Ramsayer
Melt in Antarctica
Brooke Medley, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Maryland
“I think one of the coolest things we’ve
seen is melt ponds in Antarctica. It gets your brain jogging – if we could
automatically detect individual ponds and measure their depth, it could tell us
about the liquid water storage at the surface of the ice sheet, which is one of
the most difficult things to estimate at that large a scale.
“That’s a neat thing about ICESat-2 – the
scales at which you can observe processes ranges from very small, like snow
blowing around, all the way up to the entire ice sheet.”
Accuracy & Precision from the Get-go
Kelly Brunt, NASA Goddard and the National Science
Foundation
“ICESat-2 was precise and accurate right
out of the gate. Coupled with that, it has excellent pointing knowledge and
pointing control, which means we aim to hit a spot and we hit it.
“So when we repeat orbits to measure how
things change over time, we can get a better sense of things like the grounding
zone of ice shelves, where the ice meets the ocean. We can better measure where
those are, and also see the impact of tides on the floating ice.”
Summertime Ice
Nathan Kurtz, NASA Goddard
“In the last few decades, Arctic sea ice
that used to last through the summers hasn’t been surviving. And ICESat-2 works
surprisingly well in summers, given the clouds and melt ponds. So we can track
the thickness of sea ice into the melt season, and figure out what’s causing
the melt more definitively.
“A lot of people are interested in sea ice
predictions, and whether over a summer the Arctic will be essentially free of
sea ice. ICESat-2 helps us say with confidence what’s happening.”
An
opening in the sea ice cover north of Greenland is partially filled in by much
smaller sea ice rubble and floes, as seen during an Operation IceBridge flight
in September 2019. Credits: NASA/Linette Boisvert
Snow on Ice on Water
Ron Kwok, University of Washington
“ICESat-2 is a fantastic instrument,
because we have such a significant improvement in resolution. It lets us see
these narrow leads, the open water between floes of sea ice.
“Just as important, we can now pair it
with CryoSat-2 to measure snow depth. ICESat-2 measures the top of the snow,
CryoSat-2 detects the interface of snow and ice, and together the data tells us
not just the snow depth but the sea ice thickness as well. After three years of
ICESat-2 winter measurements, we saw the changes in the ice – and those
changes weren’t small.”
A New Level of Detail
Sinead Farrell, University of Maryland, College Park
“The level of detail we can get from ICESat-2 is
something we’ve never achieved from another satellite. It’s a game changer.
“It’s providing us with information about
melt ponds on sea ice, which are roughly the sizes of Olympic swimming pools –
and ICESat-2 can measure their depth from space. This is massive because it
allows us to understand how multiyear ice is melting out in summer. We have to
observe melt ponds to understand how vulnerable the ice is to further loss.”
Detecting Climate Impacts
Thorsten Markus, NASA Headquarters in Washington
“ICESat-2 has gone beyond what it was
designed for. I’m looking forward to extending the time series to get monthly
data of polar regions over the years – something we haven’t had.
“As we get into five, six, seven years of
data, we can actually see climate signals beyond what is due to weather. Then
it becomes really interesting, and we can better understand how climate is
impacting the poles.”
By Kate Ramsayer NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA Approves Continuation of
ICESat-2 After 3+ Years of Big Results | NASA
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