首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


The physical structures of snow and sea ice in the Arctic section of 150°-180°W during the summer of 2010
Authors:HUANG Wenfeng  LEI Ruibo  ILKKA Matero  LI Qun  WANG Yongxue and LI Zhijun
Institution:1.State Key Laboratory of Coastal and Offshore Engineering, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian 116024, China2.Polar Research Institute of China, State Oceanic Administration, Shanghai 200136, China3.Department of Physics, University of Helsinki, Box 48, Fi-00014 Helsinki, Finland
Abstract:The physical structures of snow and sea ice in the Arctic section of 150°-180°W were observed on the basis of snow-pit, ice-core, and drill-hole measurements from late July to late August 2010. Almost all the investigated floes were first-year ice, except for one located north of Alaska, which was probably multi-year ice transported from north of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago during early summer. The snow covers over all the investigated floes were in the melting phase, with temperatures approaching 0℃ and densities of 295-398 kg/m3. The snow covers can be divided into two to five layers of different textures, with most cases having a top layer of fresh snow, a round-grain layer in the middle, and slush and/or thin icing layers at the bottom. The first-year sea ice contained about 7%-17% granular ice at the top. There was no granular ice in the lower layers. The interior melting and desalination of sea ice introduced strong stratifications of temperature, salinity, density, and gas and brine volume fractions. The sea ice temperature exhibited linear cooling with depth, while the salinity and the density increased linearly with normalized depth from 0.2 to 0.9 and from 0 to 0.65, respectively. The top layer, especially the freeboard layer, had the lowest salinity and density, and consequently the largest gas content and the smallest brine content. Both the salinity and density in the ice basal layer were highly scattered due to large differences in ice porosity among the samples. The bulk average sea ice temperature, salinity, density, and gas and brine volume fractions were -0.8℃, 1.8, 837 kg/m3, 9.3% and 10.4%, respectively. The snow cover, sea ice bottom, and sea ice interior show evidences of melting during mid-August in the investigated floe located at about 87°N, 175°W.
Keywords:sea ice  snow  thickness  salinity  temperature  density  Arctic Ocean
本文献已被 CNKI 维普 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
点击此处可从《海洋学报(英文版)》浏览原始摘要信息
点击此处可从《海洋学报(英文版)》下载免费的PDF全文
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号