A spurious jump in the satellite record: has Antarctic sea ice expansion been overestimated?

Recent estimates indicate that the Antarctic sea ice cover is expanding at a statistically significant rate with a magnitude one-third as large as the rapid rate of sea ice retreat in the Arctic. However, during the mid-2000s, with several fewer years in the observational record, the trend in Antarc...

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Main Authors: Eisenman, I, Meier, WN, Norris, JR
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2gq9g2z2
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt2gq9g2z2 2023-09-05T13:13:40+02:00 A spurious jump in the satellite record: has Antarctic sea ice expansion been overestimated? Eisenman, I Meier, WN Norris, JR 1289 - 1296 2014-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2gq9g2z2 unknown eScholarship, University of California qt2gq9g2z2 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2gq9g2z2 public The Cryosphere, vol 8, iss 4 Climate Action Oceanography Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences article 2014 ftcdlib 2023-08-21T18:05:58Z Recent estimates indicate that the Antarctic sea ice cover is expanding at a statistically significant rate with a magnitude one-third as large as the rapid rate of sea ice retreat in the Arctic. However, during the mid-2000s, with several fewer years in the observational record, the trend in Antarctic sea ice extent was reported to be considerably smaller and statistically indistinguishable from zero. Here, we show that much of the increase in the reported trend occurred due to the previously undocumented effect of a change in the way the satellite sea ice observations are processed for the widely used Bootstrap algorithm data set, rather than a physical increase in the rate of ice advance. Specifically, we find that a change in the intercalibration across a 1991 sensor transition when the data set was reprocessed in 2007 caused a substantial change in the long-term trend. Although our analysis does not definitively identify whether this change introduced an error or removed one, the resulting difference in the trends suggests that a substantial error exists in either the current data set or the version that was used prior to the mid-2000s, and numerous studies that have relied on these observations should be reexamined to determine the sensitivity of their results to this change in the data set. Furthermore, a number of recent studies have investigated physical mechanisms for the observed expansion of the Antarctic sea ice cover. The results of this analysis raise the possibility that much of this expansion may be a spurious artifact of an error in the processing of the satellite observations. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Arctic Sea ice The Cryosphere University of California: eScholarship Antarctic Arctic The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Climate Action
Oceanography
Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
spellingShingle Climate Action
Oceanography
Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
Eisenman, I
Meier, WN
Norris, JR
A spurious jump in the satellite record: has Antarctic sea ice expansion been overestimated?
topic_facet Climate Action
Oceanography
Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
description Recent estimates indicate that the Antarctic sea ice cover is expanding at a statistically significant rate with a magnitude one-third as large as the rapid rate of sea ice retreat in the Arctic. However, during the mid-2000s, with several fewer years in the observational record, the trend in Antarctic sea ice extent was reported to be considerably smaller and statistically indistinguishable from zero. Here, we show that much of the increase in the reported trend occurred due to the previously undocumented effect of a change in the way the satellite sea ice observations are processed for the widely used Bootstrap algorithm data set, rather than a physical increase in the rate of ice advance. Specifically, we find that a change in the intercalibration across a 1991 sensor transition when the data set was reprocessed in 2007 caused a substantial change in the long-term trend. Although our analysis does not definitively identify whether this change introduced an error or removed one, the resulting difference in the trends suggests that a substantial error exists in either the current data set or the version that was used prior to the mid-2000s, and numerous studies that have relied on these observations should be reexamined to determine the sensitivity of their results to this change in the data set. Furthermore, a number of recent studies have investigated physical mechanisms for the observed expansion of the Antarctic sea ice cover. The results of this analysis raise the possibility that much of this expansion may be a spurious artifact of an error in the processing of the satellite observations.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Eisenman, I
Meier, WN
Norris, JR
author_facet Eisenman, I
Meier, WN
Norris, JR
author_sort Eisenman, I
title A spurious jump in the satellite record: has Antarctic sea ice expansion been overestimated?
title_short A spurious jump in the satellite record: has Antarctic sea ice expansion been overestimated?
title_full A spurious jump in the satellite record: has Antarctic sea ice expansion been overestimated?
title_fullStr A spurious jump in the satellite record: has Antarctic sea ice expansion been overestimated?
title_full_unstemmed A spurious jump in the satellite record: has Antarctic sea ice expansion been overestimated?
title_sort spurious jump in the satellite record: has antarctic sea ice expansion been overestimated?
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2014
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2gq9g2z2
op_coverage 1289 - 1296
geographic Antarctic
Arctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Arctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
Sea ice
The Cryosphere
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
Sea ice
The Cryosphere
op_source The Cryosphere, vol 8, iss 4
op_relation qt2gq9g2z2
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2gq9g2z2
op_rights public
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