Description
To
track and measure sea ice motion and concentration, Passive microwave
imagers are used (SSM/I or AMSR-E). These instruments are measuring
emitted radiances from below.
Thomas Lavergne from Norwegian
Meteorological Institute is presenting the work that has been done
within OSI SAF on Sea Ice Applications. General physical role of the sea
ice in Earth\'s system we can look through the radiation. In winter
time sea is relatively warmer than atmosphere and when sea ice is
present it acts like cover to the sea radiation. On the breaking points
of ice thus there is suddenly transfer of moisture and heat from the sea
to atmosphere, both sensible heat and radiation. This process is
responsible for cloud formation and the weather conditions overall. So
for (e.g. ship) safety, weather prediction, climate monitoring or
ecosystem studies the information on sea ice coverage is crucial. To
track and measure sea ice motion and concentration, Passive microwave
imagers are used (SSM/I or AMSR-E). These instruments are measuring
emitted radiances from below. Thus they don\'t need solar light and can
operate both day and night.
WMO Competency Framework:
Ice forecasters
Satellite Skills and Knowledge for Operational Meteorologists
Format:
Online lesson/guide
Language:
English
Link to resource: https://www.eumetrain.org/index.php/resources/sea-ice-applications
Author of resource: EUMeTrain
Copyright: See Contact
Contact: info@eumetrain.org
Added by Patrick Tester on 25 Nov 2023 (last modified on 29 Nov 2023)