NASA Continues to Advance International Polar Year Science

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March 30, 2009

Steve Cole 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0918 
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx 

MEDIA ADVISORY: 09-073

NASA CONTINUES TO ADVANCE INTERNATIONAL POLAR YEAR SCIENCE

WASHINGTON -- Although the International Polar Year officially came to 
a close in February, NASA is continuing to push the frontiers of 
polar science from space, the air and the surface of ice. 

On Monday, NASA embarks on the first of two airborne field campaigns 
in the Arctic to take a closer look at Greenland and Iceland ice 
sheets and the region's sea ice and glaciers. From space, NASA's Ice, 
Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite, known as ICESat, is completing a 
seasonal survey of the world's ice sheets to gauge how and where they 
are changing. And later in 2009, NASA scientists will return to 
Antarctica to drill into the massive Pine Island Glacier. 

The two-year International Polar Year focused science and education 
activities on Earth's remote polar regions and their connections to 
the rest of the Earth system. The event marked the 125th anniversary 
of the first polar year and the 50th anniversary of the International 
Geophysical Year. Scientists from more than 60 nations participated, 
including researchers funded by NASA and other U.S. agencies. 

The International Polar Year prompted many research projects and 
innovative public outreach programs. Examples of ongoing projects 
NASA and its partners sponsor are: 

NASA SATELLITE AND PLANE FLY IN TANDEM OVER GREELAND ICE SHEET 
NASA's P-3B aircraft takes off March 30 from NASA's Wallops Flight 
Facility in Wallops Island, Va., to begin a month-long Arctic 
research mission. Its main objective is to map the changing thickness 
of the Greenland ice sheet in tandem with NASA's ICESat. Because the 
ICESat mission has surpassed its expected lifetime, NASA is ensuring 
it can maintain the continuity of this ice sheet data record by 
taking airborne measurements nearly simultaneously with measurements 
from the spacecraft. NASA's William Krabill from Wallops Flight 
Facility, an expert at Greenland airborne ice sheet mapping, is 
leading the effort, dubbed "Operation Ice Bridge." For 2009, the P-3B 
is outfitted with an expanded array of instruments. 

NEW AIRBORNE RADAR TO PEER INSIDE ICE SHEETS AND GLACIERS 
A team of NASA scientists begin an airborne campaign this spring to 
understand better how Arctic ice is changing and assess the impacts 
of climate change. During the seven-week Uninhabited Aerial Vehicle 
Synthetic Aperture Radar field campaign to Greenland and Iceland, 
scientists will use two new ice-penetrating radars flying aboard a 
modified NASA Gulfstream III aircraft. Data will provide new insights 
into our understanding of the flow of glaciers and ice streams while 
also serving as a test bed for future satellite missions. Scott 
Hensley of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., leads 
the campaign. 

GLOBAL TOPOGRAPHIC SURVEY OF ICE SHEETS BEGINS SIXTH YEAR 
NASA's polar-orbiting ICESat spacecraft is wrapping up its latest 
month-long campaign to map Earth's changing ice sheets and polar sea 
ice. The new data from ICESat's laser-pulsing instrument adds another 
year to a detailed record of changes in the mass of ice sheets, the 
thickness of sea ice, and the speed of glacier motion at the ice 
sheet margins. Ron Kwok of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and a 
team of researchers are using ICESat data to estimate how much Arctic 
sea ice has been lost in recent years. 

RESEARCHERS POISED TO RETURN TO PINE ISLAND GLACIER 
Robert Bindschadler of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, 
Md., and colleagues have revised their plans to drill through 
Antarctica's isolated Pine Island Glacier and take the first-ever 
look underneath the glacier at how the ocean and the ice interact. 
The researchers were thwarted in their first attempt during the 
2007-2008 field season because of concerns about the safety of 
landing aircraft on the remote glacier. The new plan calls for 
helicopter flights to establish a base camp later this year. 

INTERNATIONAL TEAM WORKING TO CALCULATE ANTARCTIC DRAINAGE 
For the first time, a group of researchers from seven countries are 
calculating exactly how much ice is flowing off the Antarctic Ice 
Sheet and into the ocean. This fundamental measurement -- how much 
ice is being lost at the edges of the ice sheet -- will help 
researchers improve our knowledge of the changing volume of ice on 
the continent. Using multiple satellite data sets, groups from seven 
countries are applying a new analysis method to data from three 
satellites to account for all ice loss. Robert Bindschadler of NASA's 
Goddard Space Flight Center is leading NASA's contribution to this 
international effort. 

'FROZEN' OPENS ON SCIENCE ON A SPHERE THEATRES 
NASA's newest production for the "Science on a Sphere" projection 
system debuted on March 27 at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center and 
Wallops Flight Facility. "Frozen," a 12-minute, narrated feature, 
explores Earth's changing ice and snow cover. Playing on nearly 30 
screens around the world, "Frozen" will be coming soon to a museum 
near you. 

For more information about NASA's International Polar Year projects, 
visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/ipy 

	
-end-



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