|
A new NASA study confirms that the surface temperature of Greenland's
massive ice sheet has been rising, stoked by warming air temperatures, and
fueling loss of the island's ice at the surface and throughout the mass
beneath.
Greenland's enormous ice sheet is home to enough ice to raise sea level
by about 23 feet if the entire ice sheet were to melt into surrounding
waters. Though the loss of the whole ice sheet is unlikely, loss from
Greenland's ice mass has already contributed in part to 20th century sea
level rise of about two millimeters per year, and future melt has the
potential to impact people and economies across the globe. So NASA
scientists used state-of-the-art NASA satellite technologies to explore
the behavior of the ice sheet, revealing a relationship between changes at
the surface and below. The new NASA study appears in the January issue of
the quarterly Journal of Glaciology.
"The relationship between surface temperature and mass loss lends
further credence to earlier work showing rapid response of the ice sheet
to surface meltwater," said Dorothy Hall, a senior researcher in
Cryospheric Sciences at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, in Greenbelt,
Md., and lead author of the study.
A team led by Hall used temperature data captured each day from 2000
through 2006 from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)
instrument on NASA's Terra satellite. They measured changes in the surface
temperature to within about one degree of accuracy from about 440 miles
away in space. They also measured melt area within each of the six major
drainage basins of the ice sheet to see whether melt has become more
extensive and longer lasting, and to see how the various parts of the ice
sheet are reacting to increasing air temperatures.
The team took their research at the ice sheet's surface a step further,
becoming the first to pair the surface temperature data with satellite
gravity data to investigate what internal ice changes occur as the surface
melts. Geophysicist and co-author, Scott Luthcke, also of NASA Goddard,
developed a mathematical solution, using gravity data from NASA's Gravity
Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) twin satellite system. "This
solution has permitted greatly-improved detail in both time and space,
allowing measurement of mass change at the low-elevation coastal regions
of the ice sheet where most of the melting is occurring," said Luthcke.
The paired surface temperature and gravity data confirm a strong
connection between melting on ice sheet surfaces in areas below 6,500 feet
in elevation, and ice loss throughout the ice sheet's giant mass. The
result led Hall's team to conclude that the start of surface melting
triggers mass loss of ice over large areas of the ice sheet.
The beginning of mass loss is highly sensitive to even minor amounts of
surface melt. Hall and her colleagues showed that when less than two
percent of the lower reaches of the ice sheet begins to melt at the
surface, mass loss of ice can result. For example, in 2004 and 2005, the
GRACE satellites recorded the onset of rapid subsurface ice loss less than
15 days after surface melting was captured by the Terra satellite.
"We're seeing a close correspondence between the date that surface
melting begins, and the date that mass loss of ice begins beneath the
surface," Hall said. "This indicates that the meltwater from the surface
must be traveling down to the base of the ice sheet -- through over a mile
of ice -- very rapidly, where its presence allows the ice at the base to
slide forward, speeding the flow of outlet glaciers that discharge
icebergs and water into the surrounding ocean."
Hall underscores the importance of combining results from multiple NASA
satellites to improve understanding of the ice sheet's behavior. "We find
that when we look at results from different satellite sensors and those
results agree, the confidence in the conclusions is very high," said Hall.
Hall and her colleagues believe that air temperature increases are
responsible for increasing ice sheet surface temperatures and thus
more-extensive surface melt. "If air temperatures continue rising over
Greenland, surface melt will continue to play a large role in the overall
loss of ice mass." She also noted that the team's detailed study using the
high-resolution MODIS data show that various parts of the ice sheet are
reacting differently to air temperature increases, perhaps reacting to
different climate-driven forces. This is important because much of the
southern coastal area of the ice sheet is already near the melting point
(0 degrees Celsius) during the summer.
Changes in Greenland's ice sheet surface temperature have been measured
by satellites dating back to 1981. "Earlier work has shown increasing
surface temperatures from 1981 to the present," said Hall. "However,
additional years with more accurate and finer resolution data now
available using Terra's imager are providing more information on the
surface temperature within individual basins on the ice sheet, and about
trends in ice sheet surface temperature. Combining this data with data
from GRACE, arms us with better tools to establish the relationship
between surface melting and loss of ice mass."
Related Links:
Terra's Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer
http://modis.gsfc.nasa.gov/
NASA's Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) Twin Satellite
Mission
http://www.csr.utexas.edu/grace/
Scientists Get a Real "Rise" Out of Breakthroughs in How We Understand
Changes in Sea Level
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/environment/sealevel_feature.html
http://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/greenland_temps.html
|