scholarly journals Brief communication: Rare ambient saturation during drifting snow occurrences at a coastal location of East Antarctica

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 3405-3412 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Amory ◽  
Christoph Kittel

Abstract. Sublimation of snow particles during transport has been recognized as an important ablation process on the Antarctic ice sheet. The resulting increase in moisture content and cooling of the ambient air are thermodynamic negative feedbacks that both contribute to increase the relative humidity of the air, inhibiting further sublimation when saturation is reached. This self-limiting effect and the associated development of saturated near-surface air layers in drifting snow conditions have mainly been described through modelling studies and a few field observations. A set of meteorological data, including drifting snow mass fluxes and vertical profiles of relative humidity, collected at site D17 in coastal Adélie Land (East Antarctica) during 2013 is used to study the relationship between saturation of the near-surface atmosphere and the occurrence of drifting snow in a katabatic wind region that is among the most prone to snow transport by wind. Atmospheric moistening by the sublimation of the windborne snow particles generally results in a strong increase in relative humidity with the magnitude of drifting snow and a decrease in its vertical gradient, suggesting that windborne-snow sublimation can be an important contributor to the local near-surface moisture budget. Despite a high incidence of drifting snow at the measurement location (60.1 % of the time), saturation, when attained, is however most often limited to a thin air layer below 1 m above ground. The development of a near-surface saturated air layer up to the highest measurement level of 5.5 m is observed in only 8.2 % of the drifting snow occurrences or 6.3 % of the time and mainly occurs in strong wind speed and drift conditions. This relatively rare occurrence of ambient saturation is explained by the likely existence of moisture-removal mechanisms inherent to the katabatic and turbulent nature of the boundary-layer flow that weaken the negative feedback of windborne-snow sublimation. Such mechanisms, potentially quite active in katabatic-generated windborne-snow layers all over Antarctica, may be very important in understanding the surface mass and atmospheric moisture budgets of the ice sheet by enhancing windborne-snow sublimation.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Amory ◽  
Christoph Kittel

Abstract. Sublimation of snow particles during transport has been recognized as the main ablation process on the Antarctic ice sheet. The resulting increase in moisture content and cooling of the ambient air are thermodynamic negative feedbacks that both contribute to increase the relative humidity of the air, inhibiting further sublimation when saturation is reached. This self-limiting effect and the associated development of saturated near-surface air layers in drifting snow conditions have been mainly described through modelling studies and few field observations. A set of meteorological data including drifting snow mass fluxes and vertical profiles of relative humidity collected at site D17 in coastal Adelie Land (East Antarctica) during year 2013 is used to study the relationship between saturation of the near-surface atmosphere and the occurrence of drifting snow in a katabatic wind region among the most prone to snow transport by wind. Atmospheric moistening by the sublimation of the windborne snow particles generally results in a strong increase in relative humidity with the magnitude of drifting snow and a decrease of its vertical gradient, suggesting that windborne-snow sublimation can be an important contributor to the local near-surface moisture budget. Despite a high incidence of drifting snow at the measurement location (61.3 % of the time), saturation, when attained, is however most often limited to a thin air layer below 2 meters above ground. The development of a near-surface saturated air layer up to the highest measurement level of 5.5 m is observed in only 9.6 % of the drifting snow occurrences or 5.9 % of the time and mainly occurs in strong wind speed and drift conditions. This rare occurrence of ambient saturation is explained by the likely existence of moisture-removal mechanisms inherent to the katabatic nature of the boundary-layer flow that weaken the negative feedback of windborne-snow sublimation. Such mechanisms, potentially quite active in katabatic-generated windborne-snow layers all over Antarctica may be very important in understanding the surface mass and atmospheric moisture budgets of the ice sheet by enhancing windborne-snow sublimation.


1999 ◽  
Vol 45 (150) ◽  
pp. 295-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michiel R. van den Broeke ◽  
Jan-Gunnar Winther ◽  
Elisabeth Isaksson ◽  
Jean Francis Pinglot ◽  
Lars Karlöf ◽  
...  

AbstractTemperature, density and accumulation data were obtained from shallow firn cores, drilled during an overland traverse through a previously unknown part of Dronning Maud Land, East Antarctica. The traverse area is characterised by high mountains that obstruct the ice flow, resulting in a sudden transition from the polar plateau to the coastal region. The spatial variations of potential temperature, near-surface firn density and accumulation suggest that katabatic winds are active in this region. Proxy wind data derived from firn-density profiles confirm that annual mean wind speed is strongly related to the magnitude of the surface slope. The high elevation of the ice sheet south of the mountains makes for a dry, cold climate, in which mass loss owing to sublimation is small and erosion of snow by the wind has a potentially large impact on the surface mass balance. A simple katabatic-wind model is used to explain the variations of accumulation along the traverse line in terms of divergence/convergence of the local transport of drifting snow. The resulting wind- and snowdrift patterns are closely connected to the topography of the ice sheet: ridges are especially sensitive to erosion, while ice streams and other depressions act as collectors of drifting snow.


1999 ◽  
Vol 45 (150) ◽  
pp. 295-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michiel R. van den Broeke ◽  
Jan-Gunnar Winther ◽  
Elisabeth Isaksson ◽  
Jean Francis Pinglot ◽  
Lars Karlöf ◽  
...  

AbstractTemperature, density and accumulation data were obtained from shallow firn cores, drilled during an overland traverse through a previously unknown part of Dronning Maud Land, East Antarctica. The traverse area is characterised by high mountains that obstruct the ice flow, resulting in a sudden transition from the polar plateau to the coastal region. The spatial variations of potential temperature, near-surface firn density and accumulation suggest that katabatic winds are active in this region. Proxy wind data derived from firn-density profiles confirm that annual mean wind speed is strongly related to the magnitude of the surface slope. The high elevation of the ice sheet south of the mountains makes for a dry, cold climate, in which mass loss owing to sublimation is small and erosion of snow by the wind has a potentially large impact on the surface mass balance. A simple katabatic-wind model is used to explain the variations of accumulation along the traverse line in terms of divergence/convergence of the local transport of drifting snow. The resulting wind- and snowdrift patterns are closely connected to the topography of the ice sheet: ridges are especially sensitive to erosion, while ice streams and other depressions act as collectors of drifting snow.


2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (20) ◽  
pp. 6899-6915 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Gossart ◽  
S. Helsen ◽  
J. T. M. Lenaerts ◽  
S. Vanden Broucke ◽  
N. P. M. van Lipzig ◽  
...  

Abstract In this study, we evaluate output of near-surface atmospheric variables over the Antarctic Ice Sheet from four reanalyses: the new European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts ERA-5 and its predecessor ERA-Interim, the Climate Forecast System Reanalysis (CFSR), and the Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications, version 2 (MERRA-2). The near-surface temperature, wind speed, and relative humidity are compared with datasets of in situ observations, together with an assessment of the simulated surface mass balance (approximated by precipitation minus evaporation). No reanalysis clearly stands out as the best performing for all areas, seasons, and variables, and each of the reanalyses displays different biases. CFSR strongly overestimates the relative humidity during all seasons whereas ERA-5 and MERRA-2 (and, to a lesser extent, ERA-Interim) strongly underestimate relative humidity during winter. ERA-5 captures the seasonal cycle of near-surface temperature best and shows the smallest bias relative to the observations. The other reanalyses show a general temperature underestimation during the winter months in the Antarctic interior and overestimation in the coastal areas. All reanalyses underestimate the mean near-surface winds in the interior (except MERRA-2) and along the coast during the entire year. The winds at the Antarctic Peninsula are overestimated by all reanalyses except MERRA-2. All models are able to capture snowfall patterns related to atmospheric rivers, with varying accuracy. Accumulation is best represented by ERA-5, although it underestimates observed surface mass balance and there is some variability in the accumulation over the different elevation classes, for all reanalyses.


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 1987-2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Niels Souverijns ◽  
Alexandra Gossart ◽  
Irina V. Gorodetskaya ◽  
Stef Lhermitte ◽  
Alexander Mangold ◽  
...  

Abstract. Local surface mass balance (SMB) measurements are crucial for understanding changes in the total mass of the Antarctic Ice Sheet, including its contribution to sea level rise. Despite continuous attempts to decipher mechanisms controlling the local and regional SMB, a clear understanding of the separate components is still lacking, while snowfall measurements are almost absent. In this study, the different terms of the SMB are quantified at the Princess Elisabeth (PE) station in Dronning Maud Land, East Antarctica. Furthermore, the relationship between snowfall and accumulation at the surface is investigated. To achieve this, a unique collocated set of ground-based and in situ remote sensing instrumentation (Micro Rain Radar, ceilometer, automatic weather station, among others) was set up and operated for a time period of 37 months. Snowfall originates mainly from moist and warm air advected from lower latitudes associated with cyclone activity. However, snowfall events are not always associated with accumulation. During 38 % of the observed snowfall cases, the freshly fallen snow is ablated by the wind during the course of the event. Generally, snow storms of longer duration and larger spatial extent have a higher chance of resulting in accumulation on a local scale, while shorter events usually result in ablation (on average 17 and 12 h respectively). A large part of the accumulation at the station takes place when preceding snowfall events were occurring in synoptic upstream areas. This fresh snow is easily picked up and transported in shallow drifting snow layers over tens of kilometres, even when wind speeds are relatively low (< 7 ms−1). Ablation events are mainly related to katabatic winds originating from the Antarctic plateau and the mountain ranges in the south. These dry winds are able to remove snow and lead to a decrease in the local SMB. This work highlights that the local SMB is strongly influenced by synoptic upstream conditions.


2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 801-814 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. T. M. Lenaerts ◽  
C. J. P. P. Smeets ◽  
K. Nishimura ◽  
M. Eijkelboom ◽  
W. Boot ◽  
...  

Abstract. This paper presents autonomous drifting snow observations performed on the Greenland Ice Sheet in the fall of 2012. High-frequency snow particle counter (SPC) observations at ~ 1 m above the surface provided drifting snow number fluxes and size distributions; these were combined with meteorological observations at six levels. We identify two types of drifting snow events: katabatic events are relatively cold and dry, with prevalent winds from the southeast, whereas synoptic events are short lived, warm and wet. Precipitating snow during synoptic events disturbs the drifting snow measurements. Output of the regional atmospheric climate model RACMO2, which includes the drifting snow routine PIEKTUK-B, agrees well with the observed near-surface climate at the site, as well as with the frequency and timing of drifting snow events. Direct comparisons with the SPC observations at 1 m reveal that the model overestimates the horizontal snow transport at this level, which can be related to an overestimation of saltation and the typical size of drifting snow particles.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomotaka Saruya ◽  
Shuji Fujita ◽  
Yoshinori Iizuka ◽  
Atsushi Miyamoto ◽  
Hiroshi Ohno ◽  
...  

Abstract. The crystal orientation fabric (COF) of a polar ice sheet has a significant effect on the rheology of the sheet. With the aim of better understanding the deformation regime of ice sheets, the present work investigated the COF in the upper 80 % of the depth within the 3035 m long Dome Fuji Station ice core drilled at one of the dome summits in East Antarctica. Dielectric anisotropy (∆ε) data were acquired as a novel indicator of the vertical clustering of COF resulting from vertical compressional strain within the dome, at which the ice cover has an age of approximately 300 kyrs BP. The ∆ε values were found to exhibit a general increase moving in the depth direction, but with fluctuations over distances on the order of 10–102 m. In addition, significant decreases in ∆ε were found to be associated with depths corresponding to three major glacial to interglacial transitions. These changes in ∆ε are ascribed to variations in the deformational history caused by dislocation motion occurring from near-surface depths to deeper layers. Fluctuations in ∆ε over distances of less than 0.5 m exhibited a strong inverse correlation with at depths greater than approximately 1200 m, indicating that they were enhanced during the glacial/interglacial transitions. The ∆ε data also exhibited a positive correlation with the concentration of chloride ions together with an inverse correlation with the amount of dust particles in the ice core at greater depths corresponding to decreases in the degree of c-axis clustering. Finally, we found that fluctuations in ∆ε persisted to approximately 80 % of the total depth of the ice sheet. These data suggest that the factors determining the deformation of ice include the concentration of chloride ions and amount of dust particles, and that the layered contrast associated with the COF is preserved all the way from the near-surface to a depth corresponding to approximately 80 % of the thickness of the ice sheet. These findings provide important implications regarding further development of the COF under the various stress-strain configurations that the ice will experience in the deepest region, approximately 20 % of the total depth from the ice/bed interface.


1995 ◽  
Vol 41 (138) ◽  
pp. 395-407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michiel Van Den Broeke ◽  
Richard Bintanja

AbstractBlue-ice areas (BIAs) are an extreme example of a local mass-balance gradient and are furthermore reasonably stable in time and space owing to local feed-back mechanisms. A meteorological experiment, performed in and around a blue-ice area in Dronning Maud Land. East Antarctica, showed that during drifting-snow conditions surface wind speed over the blue ice behind the mountain barrier is equal to that away from the mountains, when corrected for surface roughness and stability. This implies that use of diagnostic katabatic wind models to estimate divergence of drifting snow can be extended to the situation where nunataks are involved in preventing the drifting snow from passing, which is the case for most BIAs. A diagnostic model is tested for a two-dimensional profile in Terre Adélie. after which it is applied to entire East Antarctica. The present order-of-magnitude estimate shows that areas sensitive to blue-ice formation appear where precipitation is low and mean annual wind speed is high, i.e. in Dronning Maud Land and the drainage basin of Lambert Glacier. The results appeared to be especially sensitive to a change in inversion strength: a decrease in inversion strength weakens the katabatic flow, and thus the amount of snowdrift transport, reducing the area where BIAs can develop.


2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. T. M. Lenaerts ◽  
C. J. P. P. Smeets ◽  
K. Nishimura ◽  
M. Eijkelboom ◽  
W. Boot ◽  
...  

Abstract. This paper presents autonomous drifting snow observations performed on the Greenland Ice Sheet in the fall of 2012. High-frequency Snow Particle Counter (SPC) observations at ~1 m above the surface provided drifting snow number fluxes and size distributions; these were combined with meteorological observations at six levels. We identify two types of drifting snow events: katabatic events are relatively cold and dry, with prevalent winds from the southeast, whereas synoptic events are short-lived, warm and wet. Precipitating snow during synoptic events disturbs the drifting snow measurements. Output of the regional atmospheric climate model RACMO2, which includes the drifting snow routine PIEKTUK-B, agrees well with the observed near-surface climate at the site, as well as with the frequency and timing of drifting snow events. Direct comparisons with the SPC observations at 1 m reveal that the model overestimates the typical size of drifting snow particles, as well as the horizontal snow transport at this level.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (6) ◽  
pp. 3487-3510
Author(s):  
Charles Amory ◽  
Christoph Kittel ◽  
Louis Le Toumelin ◽  
Cécile Agosta ◽  
Alison Delhasse ◽  
...  

Abstract. Drifting snow, or the wind-driven transport of snow particles originating from clouds and the surface below and above 2 m above ground and their concurrent sublimation, is a poorly documented process on the Antarctic ice sheet, which is inherently lacking in most climate models. Since drifting snow mostly results from erosion of surface particles, a comprehensive evaluation of this process in climate models requires a concurrent assessment of simulated drifting-snow transport and the surface mass balance (SMB). In this paper a new version of the drifting-snow scheme currently embedded in the regional climate model MAR (v3.11) is extensively described. Several important modifications relative to previous version have been implemented and include notably a parameterization for drifting-snow compaction of the uppermost snowpack layer, differentiated snow density at deposition between precipitation and drifting snow, and a rewrite of the threshold friction velocity above which snow erosion initiates. Model results at high resolution (10 km) over Adélie Land, East Antarctica, for the period 2004–2018 are presented and evaluated against available near-surface meteorological observations at half-hourly resolution and annual SMB estimates. The evaluation demonstrates that MAR resolves the local drifting-snow frequency and transport up to the scale of the drifting-snow event and captures the resulting observed climate and SMB variability, suggesting that this model version can be used for continent-wide applications.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document