A data set of summer Arctic sea ice physical properties
With the global warming, the summer Arctic sea ice has experienced a series of changes. For example, the sea ice extent and thickness are reduced. Temperature, salinity and density are the basic physical properties of sea ice. It is difficult to use remote sensing technique to conduct large-scale observations, but need field measurements. This data set is the field measurement of physical properties of Arctic sea ice during the summers of 2008-2018. The observation sites are located in the Pacific sector of the Arctic Ocean. The data files contain specific information of each ice station, ice temperature (2008-2016), salinity (2008-2018), density (2008-2018) and crystal structure (2012-2018). The ice temperature is measured by a probe temperature sensor. The ice salinity data is obtained by measuring the melt water of ice sections with a salinometer. The density data is obtained using mass/volume method. The ice crystal structure is obtained by observing ice slices under crossed polarized light. The data has a wide application. It can be used to verify the simulation results of sea ice models, and also to evaluate the phase composition contents and thermodynamic properties of the Arctic summer sea ice.
Additional Information
Field | Value |
---|---|
Data last updated | May 12, 2020 |
Metadata last updated | May 12, 2020 |
Created | May 12, 2020 |
Format | XLSX |
License | Other (Open) |
Has views | True |
Id | 41198ceb-d5aa-4c48-bdca-b2daa6eb8895 |
Package id | ab2f95b0-d4a2-42e1-bf79-47897a92a5b5 |
State | active |