PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

NASA begins airborne campaign to map Greenland ice sheet summer melt

2013-11-01
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Steve Cole
Stephen.e.cole@nasa.gov
202-358-0918
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
NASA begins airborne campaign to map Greenland ice sheet summer melt

For the first time, a NASA airborne campaign will measure changes in the height of the Greenland Ice Sheet and surrounding Arctic sea ice produced by a single season of summer melt.

NASA's C-130 research aircraft flew from the Wallops Flight Facility in Wallops Island, Va., to Greenland on Wednesday where they will conduct survey flights to collect data that will improve our understanding of seasonal melt and provide baseline measurements for future satellite missions. Flights are scheduled to continue through Nov. 16.

The land and sea ice data gathered during this campaign will give researchers a more comprehensive view of seasonal changes and provide context for measurements that will be gathered during NASA's ICESat-2 mission, which is scheduled for launch in 2016.

"The more ground we cover the more comparison points we'll have for ICESat-2," said Bryan Blair of Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., principal investigator for the Land, Vegetation and Ice Sensor, or LVIS.

Warm summer temperatures lead to a decline in ice sheet elevation that often can be significant in low-lying areas along the Greenland coast. In past years, the Jakobshavn Glacier, located in the lower elevations of western Greenland, has experienced declines of nearly 100 feet in elevation over a single summer. Higher elevations farther inland see less dramatic changes, usually only a few inches, caused by pockets of air in the snowpack that shrink as temperatures warm.

"Surface melt is more than half of the story for Greenland's mass loss," said Ben Smith, senior physicist at the University of Washington's Advanced Physics Laboratory, Seattle, and member of the science team that selected flight lines for this campaign. The rest of Greenland's mass loss comes from ice flowing downhill into the ocean, often breaking off to form icebergs, and from melting at the base of the ice sheet.

Researchers will measure ice elevation using the LVIS laser altimeter and the LVIS-GH, a new, smaller version designed to fly on NASA's Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicle. LVIS and LVIS-GH will measure separate but overlapping swaths of the ice from an altitude of 28,000 feet.

VIDEO: With winter closing in, a new NASA airborne campaign got under way Oct. 31, 2013 in Greenland. For the first time, the Laser Vegetation Imaging Sensor, or LVIS, is flying...
Click here for more information.

The C-130 carrying both instruments will fly out of Thule and Kangerlussuaq, Greenland, allowing researchers to sample both high- and low-elevation ice and a variety of geographic areas.

"We plan to concentrate our flights on areas northwest, southeast and southwest Greenland and the Arctic Ocean," said Michelle Hofton, LVIS mission scientist at Goddard and the University of Maryland, College Park. "The measurements we collect along lines sampled in IceBridge's spring 2013 Arctic campaign will allow scientists to assess changes over the summer."

Flying from Thule also will allow mission scientists to gather data on Arctic sea ice shortly after it reaches its annual minimum extent. This will help researchers get a clearer picture of what happens over the summer. It also will help researchers gather new data on snow covering sea ice when combined with information collected by the European Space Agency's CryoSat-2 polar-monitoring satellite. LVIS detects the snow surface while CryoSat's radar sees through snow to find the top of the ice. Researchers can combine these measurements to calculate snow depth.

"This will be crucial for assessing the snow cover on sea ice during a very different time of year," said Nathan Kurtz, sea ice scientist at Goddard.



INFORMATION:



For more information about NASA's IceSat-2 satellite, visit:

http://icesat.gsfc.nasa.gov/icesat2



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Kessler researchers find aerobic exercise benefits memory in persons with multiple sclerosis

2013-11-01
Kessler researchers find aerobic exercise benefits memory in persons with multiple sclerosis Collaborative study reveals novel finding that aerobic exercise results in increased hippocampal volume, increased connectivity and improved memory in persons with MS West ...

Segregation in American schools still problematic, despite best efforts

2013-11-01
Segregation in American schools still problematic, despite best efforts MADISON, Wis. — As American schools struggle with issues of race, diversity and achievement, a new study in the American Sociological Review has split the difference in the ongoing discussion of ...

International team identifies earliest galaxy ever detected

2013-11-01
International team identifies earliest galaxy ever detected In a major new survey of the early universe conducted from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, UMass Amherst astronomer Mauro Giavalisco and colleagues at other institutions identify the most ...

Brushing your teeth could prevent heart disease

2013-11-01
Brushing your teeth could prevent heart disease Prospective study finds clinically significant difference in atherosclerosis progression based on changes in periodontal health Taking care of your gums by brushing, flossing, and regular ...

Animal welfare scientists reveal infrequent and inconsistent acceptance of existing data by EPA to satisfy endocrine disruptor testing requirements

2013-11-01
Animal welfare scientists reveal infrequent and inconsistent acceptance of existing data by EPA to satisfy endocrine disruptor testing requirements Norfolk, Va. – An original article by scientists at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals ...

Mid-level health workers as effective as physicians

2013-11-01
Mid-level health workers as effective as physicians This news release is available in Spanish, French, Portuguese and Arabic. Countries facing severe shortages and poor distribution of health workers could benefit from training and deploying more ...

A new weapon in the fight against superbugs

2013-11-01
A new weapon in the fight against superbugs The ever-increasing threat from "superbugs" -- strains of pathogenic bacteria that are impervious to the antibiotics that subdued their predecessor generations -- has forced the medical community to look for bactericidal ...

Patients' 'immune fingerprints' may help diagnose bacterial infections and guide treatment

2013-11-01
Patients' 'immune fingerprints' may help diagnose bacterial infections and guide treatment Body's immune response indicates type of infection and which antibiotics to use Washington, DC (October 31, 2013) — A patient's immune response may provide better and more ...

New techniques produce cleanest graphene yet

2013-11-01
New techniques produce cleanest graphene yet Columbia Engineers develop new device architecture for 2D materials, making electrical contact from the 1D edge New York, NY—October 31, 2013—Columbia Engineering researchers have experimentally demonstrated for the ...

Global warming as viewed from the deep ocean

2013-11-01
Global warming as viewed from the deep ocean The intermediate waters of the Pacific Ocean are absorbing heat 15 times faster over the past 60 years than in the past 10,000 Some climate change skeptics have pointed out that global atmospheric temperatures ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Transparent mesoporous WO₃ film enhances solar water splitting efficiency and stability

Protostellar jet detection in Milky Way’s outer region reveals universal star formation

New research uncovers a ‘ghost’ of the Australian bush

Study establishes link between rugby and dementia

Can courts safeguard fairness in an AI age?

Less than half of England has access to Mounjaro on the NHS months after roll-out

Study highlights cultural differences in parenting and reveals that how babies are soothed matters more than how fast

Claims on baby food fail to stack up

Potential molecular link between air pollutants and increased risk of Lewy body dementia revealed

Deaths from high blood pressure-related kidney disease up nearly 50% in the past 25 years

U.S. survey finds salt substitutes rarely used by people with high blood pressure

Researchers map key human proteins that power coronavirus replication, pointing to new treatment strategies

Single hair strand could provide biomarker for ALS, Mount Sinai study finds

Bio-oil made with corn stalks, wood debris could plug orphaned fossil fuel wells

Can the 'good' bacteria in your mouth act as probiotic cavity fighters?

This common fish has an uncommon feature: Forehead teeth, used for mating

UI Health performs first islet cell transplant with Lantidra

Study shows not all dietary proteins are digested the same way

MSU study finds accessible wireless ultrasounds are accurate

Scientists review breakthrough methods to disrupt toxic “forever chemicals” in water

Ghost sharks grow forehead teeth to help them have sex

How stress and social struggles fuel America’s obesity crisis

Researchers uncover similarities between human and AI learning

Researchers achieve light-induced heterolytic hydrogen dissociation at ambient temperature

Intestinal surface cells pull rather than push

Game-changing biotech for engineering pathogen-resistant crops

Evolution of rodents’ unique thumbnail contributed to their successful radiation

Estrogen-driven cell regeneration shields female kidneys from disease

Artificial intelligence helps boost LIGO

The promise and tradeoffs of the 'drone revolution' in modern agriculture

[Press-News.org] NASA begins airborne campaign to map Greenland ice sheet summer melt