Knowledge Gaps and Impact of Future Satellite Missions to Facilitate Monitoring of Changes in the Arctic Ocean

Author:

Lucas Sylvain1ORCID,Johannessen Johnny A.23,Cancet Mathilde1,Pettersson Lasse H.2ORCID,Esau Igor24ORCID,Rheinlænder Jonathan W.2ORCID,Ardhuin Fabrice5,Chapron Bertrand5,Korosov Anton2ORCID,Collard Fabrice6,Herlédan Sylvain6,Olason Einar2,Ferrari Ramiro1,Fouchet Ergane1,Donlon Craig7

Affiliation:

1. NOVELTIS, 31670 Labege, France

2. Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center (NERSC), 5007 Bergen, Norway

3. Geophysical Institute, University of Bergen, 5020 Bergen, Norway

4. Department of Physics and Technology, UiT—The Arctic University of Norway, 9019 Tromsø, Norway

5. Ifremer, 17390 La Tremblade, France

6. OceanDataLab, 29280 Locmaria-Plouzane, France

7. ESA/ESTEC, 2201 Noordwijk, The Netherlands

Abstract

Polar-orbiting satellite observations are of fundamental importance to explore the main scientific challenges in the Arctic Ocean, as they provide information on bio-geo-physical variables with a denser spatial and temporal coverage than in-situ instruments in such a harsh and inaccessible environment. However, they are limited by the lack of coverage near the North Pole (Polar gap), the polar night, and frequent cloud cover or haze over the ocean and sea ice, which prevent the use of optical satellite instruments, as well as by the limited availability of external validation data. The satellite sensors’ coverage and repeat cycles may also have limitations in properly identifying and resolving the dominant spatial and temporal scales of atmospheric, ocean, cryosphere and land variability and their interactive processes and feedback mechanisms. In this paper, we provide a state of the art of contribution of satellite observations to the understanding of the polar environment and climate scientific challenges tackled within the Arktalas Hoavva project funded by the European Space Agency. We identify the current limitations to the wider use of polar orbiting remote sensing data, as well as the observational gaps of the existing satellite missions. A comprehensive overview of all satellite missions and applications is given provided with a primary focus on the European satellites. Finally, we assess the expected capability of the approved future satellite missions to answer today’s scientific challenges in the Arctic Ocean.

Funder

European Space Agency

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

Reference49 articles.

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3. Johannessen, O.M., Bobylev, L., Shalina, E.V., and Sandven, S. (2020). Sea Ice in the Arctic–Past, Present and Future, Springer.

4. Arctic sea ice extent plummets in 2007;Stroeve;Eos Trans. AGU,2008

5. On the 2012 record low Arctic sea ice cover: Combined impact of preconditioning and an August storm;Parkinson;Geophys. Res. Lett.,2013

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