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Collaborative Research: Solar Radiation Processes in the East Antarctic Sea Ice Zone

<p>This project is a three-year study of what happens to solar energy at the interface between the antarctic sea ice and the atmosphere in late Spring and early Summer, specifically how the energy is apportioned among the ocean, the ice, and the lowest air layers. It will be carried out in cooperation with the Australian Antarctic Program, with field work on board the Australian ship Aurora Australis. The very high reflectivity of the seasonal antarctic sea ice cover reduces the input of solar energy at the surface, and the low thermal conductivity of the ice reduces the loss of heat from the ocean to the atmosphere, significantly affecting the climate of the Southern Ocean. As the sea ice decays in early summer the reflectivity is reduced and melting process is accelerated. Information about how these processes work is needed in order to develop appropriate and realistic sea ice models, and to integrate these into general circulation and climate change models. Three topics will be investigated: the distribution and types of snow and ice cover and their reflectance in the solar spectrum, the effect of clouds in transmitting incident solar radiation, and the distribution and absorption properties of organic material within the snow and ice. Calibrated downward and reflected upward irradiance observations will be used to infer the radiation balance at the surface and will be used to model the surface energy forcing for the antarctic sea ice region. The concentration and distribution of major organic absorbers will be determined from core samples within the ice, and their effect on the transmittance of energy within the visible and ultraviolet bands will be studied. Algal layers are frequently found within the antarctic sea ice, and have been proposed as a likely mechanism for initiating seasonal plankton blooms in the Southern Ocean. </p>

Contact Info

Principal Investigator

Warren, Stephen

PI Email

sgw@atmos.washington.edu

Program Manager

Bernhard Lettau

CO-PIs
  • Thomas Grenfell
Organization

University of Washington

Organization Address

4333 Brooklyn Ave NE

City

SEATTLE

State

WA

Zip

98195

Phone

2065434043

Information

Award Number

9815156

Award Amount to Date

394904

NSF Directorate

OPP

NSF Organization

ANT

Award Instrument

Continuing grant

Programs
  • ANTARCTIC OCEAN & ATMOSPH SCI
Program Element Codes
  • 5113
Program Reference Codes
  • OTHR
  • 0000
Field of Applications
  • 0311000 Polar Programs-Related
Start Date

1999-07-01T00:00:00Z

Last Amendment Date

2001-04-19T00:00:00Z

Expiration Date

2003-06-30T00:00:00Z