214 research outputs found
A First Look at NGRIP Surface Climatology (1997-2001) Using Automatic Weather Station Data
Greenland ice sheet automatic weather station (AWS) data provide high temporal resolution climate information for NGRIP (75.09980° N, 42.3326° W. 2918 m), where a tremendously long ice core climate record is becoming available. In this paper, an overview is made or the surface climatology or NGRIP to support work on ice core interpretation using GRIP meteorological observations and snow pits. Valuable perspective is given by comparison of NGRIP climate with other deep ice core sites (Summit and Camp Century), where AWS data are also available.NASANational Science Foundatio
Mapping daily snow/ice shortwave broadband albedo from Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS): The improved direct retrieval algorithm and validation with Greenland in situ measurement
Snow/ice albedo is a critical variable in surface energy balance calculations. The
Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) data have been used routinely
to provide global land surface albedo. The MODIS algorithm includes atmospheric
correction, surface reflectance angular modeling, and narrowband to broadband albedo
conversion. In an earlier study, a "direct retrieval" methodology was proposed to calculate
instantaneous albedo over snow and ice-covered surfaces directly from top-of-atmosphere
(TOA) MODIS reflectance data. The method consists of extensive radiative transfer
simulations for a variety of atmospheric and surface snow conditions and links the TOA
reflectance with surface broadband albedo through regression analysis. Therefore the
direct retrieval algorithm implicitly incorporates in a single step all three procedures used
in the standard MODIS surface albedo algorithm. This study presents improvements to the
retrieval algorithm including validation with in situ measurements distributed over the
Greenland ice sheet. Comparison with surface observations demonstrates that the direct
retrieval algorithm can produce very accurate daily snow/ice albedo with mean bias of less
than 0.02 and residual standard error of 0.04
Causes of Greenland temperature variability over the past 4000 years: Implications for North Hemispheric temperature change
第3回極域科学シンポジウム/第35回極域気水圏シンポジウム 11月29日(木) 国立国語研究所 2階多目的
Validation of a Climate-Data Record of the "Clear-Sky" Surface Temperature of the Greenland Ice Sheet
Surface temperatures on the Greenland Ice Sheet have been studied on the ground, using automatic weather station (AWS) data from the Greenland-Climate Network (GC-Net), and from analysis of satellite sensor data. Using Advanced Very High Frequency Radiometer (AVHRR) weekly surface temperature maps, warming of the surface of the Greenland Ice Sheet has been documented since 1981. We extended and refined this record using higher-resolution Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) data from March 2000 to the present. We developed a daily and monthly climate-data record (CDR) of the "clear-sky" surface temperature of the Greenland Ice Sheet using an ice-surface temperature (1ST) algorithm developed for use with MODIS data. Validation of this CDR is ongoing. MODIS Terra swath data are projected onto a polar stereographic grid at 6.25-km resolution to develop binary, gridded daily and mean-monthly 1ST maps. Each monthly map also has a color-coded image map that is available to download. Also included with the monthly maps is an accompanying map showing number of days in the month that were used to calculate the mean-monthly 1ST. This is important because no 1ST decision is made by the algorithm for cells that are considered cloudy by the internal cloud mask, so a sufficient number of days must be available to produce a mean 1ST for each grid cell. Validation of the CDR consists of several facets: 1) comparisons between ISTs and in-situ measurements; 2) comparisons between ISTs and AWS data; and 3) comparisons of ISTs with surface temperatures derived from other satellite instruments such as the Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) and Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+). Previous work shows that Terra MODIS ISTs are about 3 C lower than in-situ temperatures measured at Summit Camp, during the winter of 2008-09 under clear skies. In this work we begin to compare surface temperatures derived from AWS data with ISTs from the MODIS CDR
- …