Cryosphere Flashcards
define the cryosphere (IPCC)
the components of the Earth System at and below the land and ocean surface that are frozen, including snow cover, glaciers, ice sheets, ice shelves, icebergs, sea ice, lake ice, river ice, permafrost and seasonally frozen ground
what are CIDs
climate impact drivers
from AR6
physical climate system conditions that affect an element of society or ecosystems
can be detrimental, beneficial or neutral
SCE
snow cover extent
is the aerial extent of snow covered ground
SCD
snow cover duration is how long snow continuously remains on the land surface
Aka the period between snow on and snow off dates
Snow persistence
the probability of the persistence of snow at a given place at a given time of the year/through a time interval
SWE
snow water equivalent
the depth of liquid water if the snow were to melt completely
6 manual field observations of calculating snow cover
snow pillows, precipitation gauges, stakes, snow sampling tubes, sonar, snow pict analysis
3 compiled datasets of snow cover
ECCC environment and climate change Canada
SNOTEL for USA
Global Historical Climatology Network GHCN
satellite used for SCE and a bit about it!
MODIS on NASA’s terra satellite
Spectroradiometer that measures visible light
extends to 2000
satellite used for SWE and a bit about it!
Microwave radiometers on Nimbus 7 that read passive microwave radiation
this indicates the depth of snow and thus accumulation and ablation indicate snow persistence
this depth is then calculated with density to SWE
what is reanalysis
synthesis of observational data and numerical models to generate continuous and comprehensive datasets of past weather and climate conditions.
what are the possible drawback of reanalysis
we are reliant on the data being accurate that is inputted
often reanalysis products are built on each other, meaning errors could carry forward
what spheres are in coupled climate models
atmosphere, hydrosphere cryosphere, and bits of biosphere
Outline climate modelling
- computer programmes that simulate the earths climate system
- they use mathematical equations to represent the interactions between the various components of the earth
- they help understand how element of climate work and may change in the future
- simulate processes like atmospheric circulation, ocean currents and carbon cycle and how they are influenced by forcing
- often presented as a gridded product, mapping the flows across grids
examples of forcings for climate models
changes to atmospheric composition, radiation receipts, land use change
what are the models used in Ar5 and AR6
CMIP5 and 6
CMIP stands for
Climate model intercomparison project
what are the pathways called in AR5 and 6
Representative Concentration pathways
RCPs
Shared socioeconomic pathways SSPs
1 thing that CMIP6 improves on CMIP5
has a better modelling and understanding of snow cover feedbacks like albedo and soil moisture
define permafrost
Ground (soil or rock, including ice and organic material) that remains at or below 0 degreesC for at least two consecutive years
what is the active layer
Layer of ground above permafrost subject to annual thawing and freezing.
define talik
A layer or body of unfrozen ground in a permafrost area due to a local anomaly in thermal, hydrological, hydrogeological or hydrochemical conditions.
Define thermokarst
Process by which characteristic landforms result from thawing of ice-rich permafrost or melting of massive ice.
outline the 4 permafrost zones and their % cover
continuous permafrost - 90%+
discontinuous permafrost - 50-90%
sporadic permafrost - 10-50%
isolated permafrost - <10%
main way of calculating permafrost in situ and a bit about it!
boreholes
they are drilled vertically into the ground to access the underlying permafrost
instruments measure temperature as well as composition and stability
cores can also be extracted to analyse layers
satellites to measure permafrost and a bit about it!
ERS satellite by the ESA looks at ground temperature and land cover to estimate PF extent. we can’t measure directly