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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: Sea ice is an integral part of the climate system of the high latitude regions. Up to now, control of its occurrence and extent, especially its interannual and long-term variability, has proved difficult to isolate or quantify, especially in the data devoid regions of the Southern Ocean. The consequences of climate change induced, for example, by the continued increase of greenhouse gases, on the occurrence of sea ice, is even less certain, although the theory at least suggests that sea ice extent changes could be expected to have a positive feedback role, i.e. that reduced ice extent could be expected to enhance warming at high latitudes. The interaction of sea ice with the polar ocean and atmosphere can be summerized as follows: - The snow covered sea ice reflects the solar illumination much stronger compared to open water areas. Therefore, changes in the horizontal coverage of sea ice (ice concentration) would be related to changes of the surface reflectivity. In the polar winter, sea ice isolates the ocean from the cold polar atmosphere and reduces the heat transfer by one or two orders. Both has a strong impact on the radiation balance. - Sea ice growth and melting has a signinficant influence on the circulation of the oceans. The formation of sea ice increases the water density of the ocean boundary layer due to rejection of brine. This results in an unstable stratification of the ocean layer and deep water formation can occure. The opposite behaviour can be observed when sea ice melts. The additional freshwater causes the ocean to form a stable boundary layer.
    Keywords: Date/time end; Date/time start; Description; OBSE; Observation; ORDINAL NUMBER; PELICON; Southern Ocean; Uniform resource locator/link to raw data file
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 160 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-04-20
    Description: This dataset comprises quality-checked sea-ice concentration at 1 km spatial resolution from Sentinel-2 imagery. 83 Sentinel-2 scenes distributed over the East Siberian, Laptev, Kara, Barents and Beaufort Seas as well as the Fram Strait between February and May 2019 are analysed. For each scene, we investigated histograms of the Level 1C (L1C) reflectance of band 4 (665 nm) at 10 m resolution and manually identified two thresholds for each scene to separate it into water, thin ice and thick ice. We use the classified water/thin-ice/thick-ice images to create two sea-ice concentration datasets at 1 km spatial resolution: One which contains the thin ice (sic_thin in the netCDF files) and one which contains the thick ice (sic_thick in the netCDF files). To this end, we average the images over 100x100 pixels and interpret the ratio of sea-ice pixels within these 100x100 pixel windows as sea-ice concentration. The total sea-ice concentration can be obtained as the sum of sic_thin and sic_thick. The ice thickness of thin-ice pixels is likely below 50 cm. The data are gridded using a Transverse Mercator projection. Details about the projection can be found in the netCDF metadata. Details about the dataset are presented in https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12193183.
    Keywords: ArcTrain; Processes and impacts of climate change in the North Atlantic Ocean and the Canadian Arctic; Sea-ice concentration Sentinel-2 optical Arctic satellite reflectance
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6.5 MBytes
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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