The Arctic on thin ice
DOI: 10.1063/PT.4.0771
The Arctic Ocean’s floating sea-ice cover naturally waxes and wanes with the seasons. But the decline in area covered by perennial ice—that which survives the summer melt—has been accelerating in recent years. The nonlinear trend, no doubt, reflects the Arctic’s response to a warming climate: Thanks to the ice albedo--ocean feedback, a drop in ice cover increases the absorption of solar radiation, which warms the ocean, prolongs the melting, and reduces ice cover yet further. For quantitative details on the ice pack’s changing mass and heat capacity, though, researchers need more than areal measurements. Ronald Kwok and colleagues at NASA and the University of Washington have now published what may be the most comprehensive thickness maps of the entire Arctic basin. The lidar system they use aboard NASA’s ICESat