
The Arctic Ocean is covered by a dynamic layer of sea ice that grows
each winter and shrinks each summer, reaching its yearly minimum size
each fall. While the 2010 minimum remains to be seen, NASA's Aqua
satellite captured this snapshot on Sept. 3...
How does the Aqua satellite "see" sea ice? Microwaves. Everything on
Earth’s surface -- including people -- emits microwave radiation,
the properties of which vary with the emitter, thereby allowing the
AMSR-E microwave sensor on Aqua to map the planet.
Ice emits more microwave radiation than water, making regions of the
ocean with floating ice appear much brighter than the open ocean to the
AMSR-E sensor. This difference allows the satellite to capture a sea
ice record year-round, through cloud cover and the months of polar
night. Continuous records are important because sea ice is dynamic.
Besides melting and freezing, the ice moves with wind and currents
which can cause it to split or pile up.
"The data from AMSR-E and other NASA satellites are critical for
understanding the coupling between sea ice and the ocean and
atmosphere," said Tom Wagner, Cryosphere program manager at NASA
Headquarters in Washington. "It’s important for us to understand
these connections to improve our predictive models of how the planet
will change."
The Arctic sea ice is a major factor in the global climate system. The
ice cools the planet by reflecting sunlight back into space. It also
helps drive ocean circulation by converting the warm Pacific water that
flows into the Arctic into the cold, saltier water that empties into
the Atlantic. The sea ice also fundamentally shapes the Arctic;
defining the organisms that make up its ecosystem and keeping heat from
the ocean from melting the frozen tundra.
In fall 2009, Arctic sea ice reached its minimum extent on about Sept.
12, and was the third lowest since satellite microwave measurements
were first made in 1979. Researchers are interested in year-to-year
changes, which can be highly variable, so that scientists need many
years, even decades, of data to examine long-term trends. Notably, all
of the major minimums have occurred in the last decade, consistent with
other NASA research, which shows January 2000 to December 2009 was the
warmest decade on record.
As the sea ice nears the 2010 minimum later this month, look for images
and analysis from NASA and the National Snow and Ice Data Center, in
Boulder, Colo.