Spatiotemporal variability and decadal trends of snowmelt processes on Antarctic sea ice observed by satellite scatterometers
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Published:2019-07-17
Issue:7
Volume:13
Page:1943-1958
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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:
Arndt StefanieORCID, Haas ChristianORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The timing and intensity of snowmelt processes on sea ice
are key drivers determining the seasonal sea-ice energy and mass budgets. In
the Arctic, satellite passive microwave and radar observations have revealed
a trend towards an earlier snowmelt onset during the last decades, which is
an important aspect of Arctic amplification and sea-ice decline. Around
Antarctica, snowmelt on perennial ice is weak and very different than in the
Arctic, with most snow surviving the summer. Here we compile time series of snowmelt onset dates on seasonal and
perennial Antarctic sea ice from 1992 to 2014/15 using active microwave
observations from the European Space Agency's (ESA) European
Remote Sensing (ERS) 1 and 2 missions (ERS-1 and ERS-2), Quick
Scatterometer (QSCAT), and Advanced Scatterometer (ASCAT) radar
scatterometers. We define two snowmelt transition stages: a weak backscatter
rise, indicating the initial warming and destructive metamorphism of the
snowpack (pre-melt), followed by a rapid backscatter rise, indicating the
onset of thaw–freeze cycles (snowmelt). Results show large interannual variability, with an average pre-melt onset
date of 29 November and melt onset of 10 December, respectively, on
perennial ice, without any significant trends over the study period,
consistent with the small trends of Antarctic sea-ice extent. There was a
latitudinal gradient from early snowmelt onsets in mid-November in the
northern Weddell Sea to late (end of December) or even absent snowmelt
conditions in the southern Weddell Sea. We show that QSCAT Ku-band-derived (13.4 GHz signal frequency) pre-melt and
snowmelt onset dates are earlier by 20 and 18 d, respectively, than ERS
and ASCAT C-band-derived (5.6 GHz) dates. This offset has been considered
when constructing the time series. Snowmelt onset dates from passive
microwave observations (37 GHz) are later by 14 and 6 d than those from
the scatterometers, respectively. Based on these characteristic differences between melt onset dates observed
by different microwave wavelengths, we developed a conceptual model which
illustrates how the seasonal evolution of snow temperature profiles may
affect different microwave bands with different penetration depths. These
suggest that future multi-frequency active and passive microwave satellite
missions could be used to resolve melt processes throughout the vertical
snow column of thick snow on perennial Antarctic sea ice.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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