Today was Mega BuoyA float moored in water or ice to mark a location, warn of danger, or indicate a navigational channel. day, meaning that 4 buoys were deployed on one ice floe, creating an Ice-Based ObservatoryA location used for observing terrestrial and/or celestial events. (IBO). The data collected by these 4 systems will give scientists a detailed picture over time of Arctic ice, water and weather dynamics. (And no one has to stay here over winter!)
David Meldrum of the Scottish Association for Marine Science (SAMS) deployed his SAMS- Ice Mass BalanceThe difference between the mass gained by new ice growth and the amount lost by melting. Station (IMBS).
David is trying to measure the flux* of heat through the ice from both the sun and the water. His station has 3 systems to collect data. The first system measures the temperature of the ice, and the air just above and water just below. The second collects both incoming and outgoing solar radiation. Using two sets of sensors, one pointing up and the other pointing down, he measures how much of the incoming radiation is reflecting back off the ice into the atmosphere.
**Question: **what is the name of the ratio of reflected to incoming solar radiation?
The third system collects general weather data: air temperature, wind speed, precipitation, air pressure and humidity. It is all powered by 2 batteries charged by the wind and the sun! The data collected here will allow David to add to his model of ice dynamics.
Mike Dempsey deployed an Ice Mass BalanceThe difference between the mass gained by new ice growth and the amount lost by melting. BuoyA float moored in water or ice to mark a location, warn of danger, or indicate a navigational channel. (IMB buoy) for the US Army Cold Regions Research Engineering Lab in Dartmouth, NH.
This system measures the accumulation of ice and snow from both above and below the ice floe. It has a string of thermistors that record the temperatures of the boundary layer*, the area where ice becomes water and water becomes ice. Understanding how quickly the ice melts in summer and freezes in winter offers another measure of the Arctic climate and how it is changing.
WHOI deployed two buoys here. Another ITP was installed (see 3 August Journal entry and http://www.whoi.edu/itp/ for details on this ice based system).
They also put out an Autonomous Ocean Flux BuoyA float moored in water or ice to mark a location, warn of danger, or indicate a navigational channel. (AOFB) for the Naval Post-Graduate School. This system measures turbulence between the ice-ocean boundary layer. These data offer a direct measurement of temperature, salinity and momentum* fluxes between the ice and water. Details on this buoy are here: http://www.oc.nps.navy.mil\~stanton\fluxbuoy
Ice and snow samples were also collected here, giving a more complete picture of this IBO.
Putting all these data together, scientists can build a model that incorporates past data, past cause-and-effect connections, and applies them to the future.
So long, for now, from the Louis!
TERMS flux - The flow of something between layers. For example, the SAMS-IMBS is measuring the flux of heat from the sun through the ice into the water below and the flux of heat from the water to the ice above.
boundary layer - the interface between two substances. For example, in the ice-water boundary layer under the ice and above the water, ice is melting and water is freezing.
momentum = mass x velocity. For example, the AOFB is measuring the momentum that the ice and water gain and exchange from wind and currents.
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