NASA Airborne Expedition Chases Arctic Sea Ice Questions

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July 16, 2009

Sonja Alexander 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1761 
sonja.r.alexander@xxxxxxxx 

Ruth Dasso Marlaire 
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. 
650-604-4709 
ruth.marlaire@xxxxxxxx 

Jim Scott 
University of Colorado at Boulder 
303-492-3114 
jim.scott@xxxxxxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 09-167

NASA AIRBORNE EXPEDITION CHASES ARCTIC SEA ICE QUESTIONS

WASHINGTON -- A small NASA aircraft completed its first successful 
science flight Thursday as part of an expedition to study the 
receding Arctic sea ice and improve understanding of its life cycle 
and the long-term stability of the Arctic ice cover. The mission 
continues through July 24. 

NASA's Characterization of Arctic Sea Ice Experiment, known as CASIE, 
began a series of unmanned aircraft system flights in coordination 
with satellites. Working with the University of Colorado and its 
research partners, NASA is using the remotely-piloted aircraft to 
image thick, old slabs of ice as they drift from the Arctic Ocean 
south through Fram Strait -- which lies between Greenland and 
Svalbard, Norway -- into the North Atlantic Ocean. 

NASA's Science Instrumentation Evaluation Remote Research Aircraft, or 
SIERRA, will weave a pattern over open ocean and sea ice to map and 
measure ice conditions below cloud cover to as low as 300 feet. 

"Our project is attempting to answer some of the most basic questions 
regarding the most fundamental changes in sea ice cover in recent 
years," said James Maslanik, a research professor at the University 
of Colorado at Boulder, and principal investigator for the NASA 
mission. "Our analysis of satellite data shows that in 2009 the 
amount of older ice is just 12 percent of what it was in 1988 -- a 
decline of 74 percent. The oldest ice types now cover only 2 percent 
of the Arctic Ocean as compared to 20 percent during the 1980s." 

SIERRA, laden with scientific instruments, travels long distances at 
low altitudes, flying below the clouds. The aircraft has high 
maneuverability and slow flight speed. SIERRA's relatively large 
payload, approximately 100 pounds, combined with a significant range 
of 500 miles and small size of 20 ft. wingspan makes it the ideal 
aircraft for this expedition. 

The mission is conducted from the Ny-Alesund research base on the 
island of Svalbard, Norway, located near the northeastern tip of 
Greenland. Mission planners are using satellite data to direct 
flights of the aircraft. 

"Today, we demonstrated the utility of small- to medium-class unmanned 
aircraft systems for gathering science data in remote harsh 
environments during the CASIE mission," said Matt Fladeland, CASIE 
project and SIERRA manager at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett 
Field, Calif. 

The aircraft observations will be complemented by NASA satellite 
large-scale views of many different features of the Arctic ice. The 
Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer aboard NASA's Aqua 
satellite will be used to identify the ice edge location, ice 
features of interest, and cloud cover. Other sensors, such as the 
Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer -- Earth Observing System on 
Aqua and the Quick Scatterometer can penetrate cloud cover and 
analyze the physical properties of ice. By using multiple types of 
satellite data, in conjunction with the high resolution aircraft 
products, more can be learned about ice conditions than is possible 
by using one or two data analysis methods. 

NASA's CASIE mission supports a larger NASA-funded research effort 
titled "Sea Ice Roughness as an Indicator of Fundamental Changes in 
the Arctic Ice Cover: Observations, Monitoring, and Relationships to 
Environmental Factors." The project also supports the goals of the 
International Polar Year, a major international scientific research 
effort involving many NASA research efforts to study large-scale 
environmental change in Earth's polar regions. 

The CASIE expedition is providing mission updates online at: 



http://blogs.nasa.gov/cm/blog/CASIE 




http://twitter.com/NASA_CASIE 


For more information about NASA's Characterization of Arctic Sea Ice 
Experiment, visit: 



http://www.espo.nasa.gov/casie 

	
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