Laboratory and field measurements of acoustic scattering from sea ice

1988 ◽  
Vol 84 (S1) ◽  
pp. S123-S123
Author(s):  
K. C. Jezek ◽  
T. K. Stanton ◽  
A. J. Gow ◽  
M. Lange
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randall Kenneth Scharien ◽  
Torsten Geldsetzer ◽  
Jim Mead ◽  
Vishnu Nandan ◽  
Mallik Mahmud ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (12) ◽  
pp. 3129-3155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hakase Hayashida ◽  
Nadja Steiner ◽  
Adam Monahan ◽  
Virginie Galindo ◽  
Martine Lizotte ◽  
...  

Abstract. Sea ice represents an additional oceanic source of the climatically active gas dimethyl sulfide (DMS) for the Arctic atmosphere. To what extent this source contributes to the dynamics of summertime Arctic clouds is, however, not known due to scarcity of field measurements. In this study, we developed a coupled sea ice–ocean ecosystem–sulfur cycle model to investigate the potential impact of bottom-ice DMS and its precursor dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) on the oceanic production and emissions of DMS in the Arctic. The results of the 1-D model simulation were compared with field data collected during May and June of 2010 in Resolute Passage. Our results reproduced the accumulation of DMS and DMSP in the bottom ice during the development of an ice algal bloom. The release of these sulfur species took place predominantly during the earlier phase of the melt period, resulting in an increase of DMS and DMSP in the underlying water column prior to the onset of an under-ice phytoplankton bloom. Production and removal rates of processes considered in the model are analyzed to identify the processes dominating the budgets of DMS and DMSP both in the bottom ice and the underlying water column. When openings in the ice were taken into account, the simulated sea–air DMS flux during the melt period was dominated by episodic spikes of up to 8.1 µmol m−2 d−1. Further model simulations were conducted to assess the effects of the incorporation of sea-ice biogeochemistry on DMS production and emissions, as well as the sensitivity of our results to changes of uncertain model parameters of the sea-ice sulfur cycle. The results highlight the importance of taking into account both the sea-ice sulfur cycle and ecosystem in the flux estimates of oceanic DMS near the ice margins and identify key uncertainties in processes and rates that should be better constrained by new observations.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosemary Willatt ◽  
Julienne Stroeve ◽  
Vishnu Nandan ◽  
Rasmus Tonboe ◽  
Stefan Hendricks ◽  
...  

<p>Retrieving the thickness of sea ice, and its snow cover, on long time- and length-scales is critical for studying climate. Satellite altimetry has provided estimations of sea ice thickness spanning nearly three decades, and more recently altimetry techniques have provided estimations of snow depth, using dual-band satellite altimetry data. These approaches are based on assumptions about the main scattering surfaces of the radiation. The dominant scattering surface is often assumed to be the snow/ice interface at Ku-band frequencies and the air/snow interface at Ka-band and laser frequencies. It has previously been shown that these assumptions do not always hold, but field data to investigate the dominant scattering surfaces and investigate how these relate to the physical snow and ice characteristics were spatially and temporally limited. The MOSAiC expedition provided a unique opportunity to gather data using a newly-developed Ku- and Ka-band radar 'KuKa' deployed over snow-covered sea ice, along with coincident field measurements of snow and ice properties. We present transect data gathered with the instrument looking at nadir to demonstrate how the scattering characteristics vary spatially and temporally in the Ku- and Ka-bands, and discuss implications for interpretation of dual-frequency satellite radar altimetry data. We compare KuKa data with field measurements to demonstrate snow depth retrieval using Ku- and Ka-band data.</p>


1987 ◽  
Vol 40 (9) ◽  
pp. 1232-1242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Devinder S. Sodhi ◽  
Gordon F. N. Cox

A brief review of significant advances in the field of sea ice mechanics in the United States is presented in this paper. Emphasis is on ice forces on structures, as the subject relates to development of oil and gas resources in the southern Beaufort Sea. The main topics discussed here are mechanical properties, ice–structure interaction, modeling of sea ice drift, and oil industry research activities. Significant advances in the determination of ice properties are the development of testing procedures to obtain consistent results. Using stiff testing machines, researchers have been able to identify the dependence of tensile and compressive strengths on different parameters, eg, strain rate, temperature, grain size, c-axis orientation, porosity, and state of stress (uniaxial or multiaxial). Now reliable data exist on the tensile and compressive strengths of first-year and multi-year sea ice. Compressive strengths obtained from field testing of large specimens (6 × 3 × 2 m thick) were found to be within 30% of the strengths obtained from small samples tested in laboratory at the same temperature and strain rate as found in the field. Recent advances in the development of constitutive relations and yield criteria have incorporated the concept of damage mechanics to include the effect of microfracturing during the ice failure process. Ice forces generated during an ice–structure interaction are related to ice thickness and properties by conducting analytical or small-scale experimental studies, or both. Field measurements of ice forces have been made to assess the validity of theoretical and small-scale experimental results. There is good agreement between theoretical and small-scale experimental results for ice forces on conical structures. Theoretical elastic buckling loads also agree with the results of small-scale experiments. Though considerable insight has been achieved for ice crushing failure, estimation of ice forces for this mode is based on empirical relations developed from small-scale experiments. A good understanding of the ice failure process has been achieved when ice fails in a single failure mode, but our understanding of multi-modal ice failure still remains poor. Field measurements of effective pressure indicate that it decreases with increasing contact area. Research in fracture mechanics and nonsimultaneous failure is underway to explain this observed trend. Ice ridge formation and pile-up have been modeled, and the forces associated with these processes are estimated to be low. The modeling of sea ice drift has progressed to a point where it is able to determine the extent, thickness distribution, and drift velocity field of sea ice over the entire arctic basin. Components of this model relate to momentum balance, thermodynamic processes, ice thickness distribution, ice strength, and ice rheology.


Author(s):  
Jim Thomson ◽  
Lucia Hošeková ◽  
Michael H. Meylan ◽  
Alison L Kohout ◽  
Nirnimesh Kumar

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Igor A. Dmitrenko ◽  
Vladislav Petrusevich ◽  
Gérald Darnis ◽  
Sergei A. Kirillov ◽  
Alexander S. Komarov ◽  
...  

Abstract. A two-year-long time series of currents and acoustic backscatter from an Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler, moored over the eastern Beaufort Sea continental slope from October 2003 to September 2005, were used to assess dynamics and variability of the sound-scattering layer. It has been shown that acoustic backscatter is dominated by a synchronized diel vertical migration (DVM) of the zooplankton. Our results show that DVM timings (i) were synchronous with sunlight, and (ii) were modified by moonlight and sea-ice, which attenuates light transmission to the water column. Moreover, DVM is modified or completely disrupted during highly energetic current events. Thicker ice observed during winter 2004–2005 lowered the backscatter values, but favored extending DVM toward the midnight sun. In contrast to many previous studies, DVM occurred through the intermediate water layer during the ice-free season of the midnight sun in 2004. In 2005, the midnight sun DVM was likely masked by a high acoustic scattering generated by suspended particles. During full moon at low cloud cover, the nighttime moonlight illuminance led to zooplankton avoidance of the sub-surface layer disrupting DVM. Moreover, DVM was disrupted by upwelling, downwelling and eddy passing. We suggest that these deviations are consistent with DVM adjusting to avoid enhanced water dynamics. For upwelling and downwelling, zooplankton likely respond to the along-slope water dynamics dominated by surface- and depth-intensified flow, respectively. This drives zooplankton to adjust DVM by aggregating in the low or upper intermediate water layer for upwelling and downwelling, respectively. The baroclinic eddy reversed DVM below the eddy core.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jim Thomson ◽  
Lucia Hosekova ◽  
Michael Howard Meylan ◽  
Alison Laura kohout ◽  
Nirnimesh Kumar

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