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09/16/08: Arctic Sea Ice Reaches Second Lowest Recorded Extent.
Arctic sea ice coverage appears to have reached its
lowest extent for the year and the second-lowest amount recorded since the
dawn of the satellite era, according to observations from the
NASA-supported National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of
Colorado in Boulder.
While slightly above the record-low minimum
set Sept. 16, 2007, this season further reinforces the strong negative
trend in summer sea ice extent observed during the past 30 years. Before
last year, the previous record low for September was set in 2005.
In March, when the Arctic reached its annual
maximum sea ice coverage during the winter, scientists from NASA and the
data center reported that thick, older sea ice was continuing to decline.
According to NASA-processed satellite microwave data, this perennial
ice used to cover 50-60 percent of the Arctic, but this winter it covered
less than 30 percent. Perennial sea ice is the long-lived layer of ice
that remains even when the surrounding short-lived seasonal sea ice melts
to its minimum extent during the summer.
NASA scientists have been
observing Arctic sea ice cover since 1979 NASA developed the capability to
observe the extent and concentration of sea ice from space using passive
microwave sensors.
The National Snow and Ice Data Center will issue an analysis of the possible causes behind this year's Arctic sea ice conditions during the first week of October.
The Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer (AMSR-E)
is a high-resolution passive microwave Instrument on NASA’s Aqua
satellite. AMSR-E provides a remarkably clear view of sea ice dynamics in
greater detail than has ever been seen before. Researchers use this information to study polar bear habitats, plan expeditions to the ice, and to study the interactions between the ocean and sea ice from season to season. This data visualization shows Arctic sea ice from July 1 to Sept. 10, 2008. Credit: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio; Blue Marble Next Generation data courtesy Reto Stockli (NASA/GSFC).

Image above: Polar ice
reflects light from the sun. As this ice begins to melt, less sunlight
gets reflected into space. It is instead absorbed into the oceans and
land, raising the overall temperature, and fueling further melting. This
results in a positive feedback loop called ice albedo feedback, which
causes the loss of the sea ice to be self-compounding. The more it
disappears, the more likely it is to continue to disappear. Credit:
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab.
- courtesy of: Steve Cole, NASA Headquarters, Washington DC; Stephanie Renfrow,
National Snow and Ice Data Center, Boulder, Co.
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