MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov 

Alan Buis  (818) 354-0474
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.    

Dr. Mark Drinkwater  +31 (0) 71 565 4514
European Space Agency, Noordwijk, The Netherlands

Michael Smart  (801) 422-7320
Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah

Dr. Steve Harangozo  01 1223 221437
British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, United Kingdom  

January 13, 2003
   
News Release: 2003-004

NASA Instrument Captures Early Antarctic Ice Shelf Melting

An international research team using data from NASA's SeaWinds
instrument aboard the Quick Scatterometer spacecraft has detected the
earliest yet recorded pre-summer melting event in a section of
Antarctica's Larsen Ice Shelf.  This huge, nearly 200 meter (656 foot)
thick plate of glacier-fed floating ice, which in the late 1980s was
about as large as Indiana, experienced dramatic disintegration events
beginning in 1995 that have reduced its area by nearly 10 percent, or
more than two trillion tons of ice. 

Researchers Dr. Mark Drinkwater of the European Space Agency, Dr.
David Long of Brigham Young University and Dr. Steve Harangozo of the
British Antarctic Survey used near real time Quick Scatterometer
(QuikScat) data to document a rapid, extensive melting of the Larsen C
Ice Shelf in Antarctica's Weddell Sea from Oct. 27 to Oct. 29, 2002. 
The melting, which extended to 68 degrees south, was triggered by a
mid-latitude cyclone that delivered warm air to the region.  The same
storm is believed to have also caused a noticeable recession in the
sea-ice margin to the west of the Antarctic Peninsula.  The QuikScat
images are available at:

http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA03894

Air temperatures in the region typically exceed freezing for a few
days on or after November 1 each year-a precursor to sustained summer
melting that normally sets in several weeks later at these latitudes. 
The cumulative duration of these annual summer melting events is
likely to have increased substantially over the past 50 years as
summer average air temperatures on the eastern side of the Antarctic
Peninsula have warmed appreciably (approximately two degrees Celsius,
or 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit).  Scientists believe these events are
responsible for the previous breakups of Larsen and other ice shelves.
Therefore, the ability to observe such events in near real time using
scatterometers is of great interest to researchers, since they may
provide invaluable clues to the fate of other, much larger Antarctic
ice shelves.

While scientists used to believe there was no connection between
recent Antarctic Peninsula warming and the natural cycle of
deglaciation, recent field measurements provide some evidence to
suggest the frequency of summer melting, and the resulting quantities
of melt water penetrating ice shelves, may be connected with the
accelerated disintegration of Larsen and other Antarctic ice shelves. 

"The water is believed to penetrate cracks and fissures in the ice and
refreeze at depth, where the ice is relatively colder," said
Drinkwater.  "As the ice expands, this process effectively drives a
wedge into existing cracks to accelerate the natural fracture
process."

Scatterometers operate by transmitting high-frequency microwave pulses
to Earth's surface and measuring the "backscattered," or echoed, radar
pulses bounced back to the satellite.  Moshe Pniel, scatterometer
projects manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena,
Calif., which developed and manages the instruments, said
scatterometers such as SeaWinds on QuikScat and a similar SeaWinds
instrument on Japan's recently launched Advanced Earth Observing
Satellite 2 (Adeos 2), are proving to be increasingly important in
monitoring land and ice processes. 

"Scatterometers can effectively and quickly detect the difference
between melting and dry surfaces," he said.  "They provide an
important new tool in our capability to monitor climate change impacts
on the Antarctic ice cover on a daily basis.  These scatterometer data
are vital in the southern hemisphere because near real time synthetic
aperture radar data is not available there on a frequent,
uninterrupted basis.  QuikScat measurements being compiled and
archived in the Scatterometer Climate Record Pathfinder study by Long
and Drinkwater (http://www.scp.byu.edu http://www.scp.byu.edu/) enable
critical assessments of the links between changes taking place in
global ice cover and associated changes in important elements of
Earth's closely-linked ocean-atmosphere climate system." 

QuikScat measurements and image data developed by Long are processed
and distributed in near real time by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, providing scientists at the British
Antarctic Survey and elsewhere with rapid access to low-resolution
radar data that can be used to report melt events.  The British
Antarctic Survey compiles and distributes Antarctic Meteorological
Station data in near real time.   

More information about SeaWinds is available at:
http://winds.jpl.nasa.gov/index.html .
      
NASA's Earth Science Enterprise is a long-term research effort to
understand and protect our home planet.  The California Institute of
Technology in Pasadena manages JPL for NASA.

-end-


______________________________________________
Meteorite-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to