A new Level 4 multi-sensor ice surface temperature product for the Greenland Ice Sheet
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Published:2022-09-14
Issue:9
Volume:16
Page:3703-3721
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Karagali IoannaORCID, Barfod Suhr Magnus, Mottram RuthORCID, Nielsen-Englyst Pia, Dybkjær Gorm, Ghent Darren, Høyer Jacob L.
Abstract
Abstract. The Greenland Ice Sheet (GIS) is subject to amplified impacts of climate change and its monitoring is essential for understanding and improving
scenarios of future climate conditions. Surface temperature over the GIS is an important variable, regulating processes related to the exchange of
energy and water between the surface and the atmosphere. Few local observation sites exist; thus spaceborne platforms carrying thermal infrared
instruments offer an alternative for surface temperature observations and are the basis for deriving ice surface temperature (IST) products. In this study several satellite IST products for the GIS were compared, and the first multi-sensor, gap-free (Level 4, L4) product was developed and
validated for 2012. High-resolution Level 2 (L2) products from the European Space Agency (ESA) Land Surface Temperature Climate Change Initiative
(LST_cci) project and the Arctic and Antarctic Ice Surface Temperatures from Thermal Infrared Satellite Sensors (AASTI) dataset were assessed
using observations from the PROMICE (Programme for Monitoring of the Greenland Ice Sheet) stations and IceBridge flight campaigns. AASTI showed overall better performance compared to LST_cci data,
which had superior spatial coverage and availability. Both datasets were utilised to construct a daily, gap-free L4 IST product using the optimal
interpolation (OI) method. The resulting product performed satisfactorily when compared to surface temperature observations from PROMICE and
IceBridge. Combining the advantages of satellite datasets, the L4 product allowed for the analysis of IST over the GIS during 2012, when a
significant melt event occurred. Mean summer (June–August) IST was −5.5 ± 4.5 ∘C, with an annual mean of
−22.1 ± 5.4 ∘C. Mean IST during the melt season (May–August) ranged from −15 to
−1 ∘C, while almost the entire GIS experienced at least between 1 and 5 melt days when temperatures were −1 ∘C
or higher. Finally, this study assessed the potential for using the satellite L4 IST product to improve model simulations of the GIS surface mass balance
(SMB). The L4 IST product was assimilated into an SMB model of snow and firn processes during 2012, when extreme melting occurred, to assess the
impact of including a high-resolution IST product on the SMB model. Compared with independent observations from PROMICE and IceBridge, inclusion of
the L4 IST dataset improved the SMB model simulated IST during the key onset of the melt season, where model biases are typically large and can
impact the amount of simulated melt.
Funder
European Space Agency
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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