Tidal motion, ice velocity and melt rate of Petermann Gletscher, Greenland, measured from radar interferometry

Over a floating glacier ice tongue or an ice shelf, the glacier motion measured by a single, repeat-pass, radar interferogram is difficult to analyze, because the long-term, steady motion of the ice is intermixed with its cyclic, downward motion induced by tidal forcing. Multiple interferograms and...

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Main Author: Rignot, Eric
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/36d8b95c
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt36d8b95c 2023-06-18T03:40:43+02:00 Tidal motion, ice velocity and melt rate of Petermann Gletscher, Greenland, measured from radar interferometry Rignot, Eric 476 - 485 1996-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/36d8b95c unknown eScholarship, University of California qt36d8b95c https://escholarship.org/uc/item/36d8b95c CC-BY Journal of Glaciology, vol 42, iss 142 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences article 1996 ftcdlib 2023-06-05T18:02:22Z Over a floating glacier ice tongue or an ice shelf, the glacier motion measured by a single, repeat-pass, radar interferogram is difficult to analyze, because the long-term, steady motion of the ice is intermixed with its cyclic, downward motion induced by tidal forcing. Multiple interferograms and a quadruple-difference technique are necessary to separate the tidal signal from the long-term, steady motion of the ice. An example of application of this technique is given here using ERS-1 radar images of Petermann Gletscher, a major outlet glacier of northern Greenland. Tidal displacements are measured with <5 mm statistical noise. The long-term ice velocity is measured with a precision of 1 m a-1. The inferred tidal displacements agree well with model predictions from a fixed elastic beam with an elastic damping factor of 0.47 ± 0.01 km-1. The hinge line is mapped with a precision of 20-80 m. Combining the interferometric ice velocities with ice thickness data, the glacier ice discharge is calculated at and below the hinge line. At the hinge line, the ice flux is 12.1 ± 1 km3 a-1. At the ice front, calf-ice production is only 0.59 km3 a-1, meaning that 95% of the ice that crosses the grounding line melts before it reaches the calving front. Assuming steady-state conditions, the melt rate of the glacier tongue averages 12 ± 1 m a-1, with peak values exceeding 20 m a-1 near the hinge line. This high melt rate cannot be accommodated by surface ablation alone (only about 2-3 m a-1) and is attributed to pronounced basal melting of the ice tongue. Basal melting, often assumed to be negligible in Greenland, is the dominant process of mass release from the floating section of Petermann Gletscher. Article in Journal/Newspaper glacier Greenland Ice Shelf Journal of Glaciology Petermann gletscher University of California: eScholarship Greenland Petermann Gletscher ENVELOPE(-59.500,-59.500,80.500,80.500)
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
spellingShingle Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
Rignot, Eric
Tidal motion, ice velocity and melt rate of Petermann Gletscher, Greenland, measured from radar interferometry
topic_facet Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
description Over a floating glacier ice tongue or an ice shelf, the glacier motion measured by a single, repeat-pass, radar interferogram is difficult to analyze, because the long-term, steady motion of the ice is intermixed with its cyclic, downward motion induced by tidal forcing. Multiple interferograms and a quadruple-difference technique are necessary to separate the tidal signal from the long-term, steady motion of the ice. An example of application of this technique is given here using ERS-1 radar images of Petermann Gletscher, a major outlet glacier of northern Greenland. Tidal displacements are measured with <5 mm statistical noise. The long-term ice velocity is measured with a precision of 1 m a-1. The inferred tidal displacements agree well with model predictions from a fixed elastic beam with an elastic damping factor of 0.47 ± 0.01 km-1. The hinge line is mapped with a precision of 20-80 m. Combining the interferometric ice velocities with ice thickness data, the glacier ice discharge is calculated at and below the hinge line. At the hinge line, the ice flux is 12.1 ± 1 km3 a-1. At the ice front, calf-ice production is only 0.59 km3 a-1, meaning that 95% of the ice that crosses the grounding line melts before it reaches the calving front. Assuming steady-state conditions, the melt rate of the glacier tongue averages 12 ± 1 m a-1, with peak values exceeding 20 m a-1 near the hinge line. This high melt rate cannot be accommodated by surface ablation alone (only about 2-3 m a-1) and is attributed to pronounced basal melting of the ice tongue. Basal melting, often assumed to be negligible in Greenland, is the dominant process of mass release from the floating section of Petermann Gletscher.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Rignot, Eric
author_facet Rignot, Eric
author_sort Rignot, Eric
title Tidal motion, ice velocity and melt rate of Petermann Gletscher, Greenland, measured from radar interferometry
title_short Tidal motion, ice velocity and melt rate of Petermann Gletscher, Greenland, measured from radar interferometry
title_full Tidal motion, ice velocity and melt rate of Petermann Gletscher, Greenland, measured from radar interferometry
title_fullStr Tidal motion, ice velocity and melt rate of Petermann Gletscher, Greenland, measured from radar interferometry
title_full_unstemmed Tidal motion, ice velocity and melt rate of Petermann Gletscher, Greenland, measured from radar interferometry
title_sort tidal motion, ice velocity and melt rate of petermann gletscher, greenland, measured from radar interferometry
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 1996
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/36d8b95c
op_coverage 476 - 485
long_lat ENVELOPE(-59.500,-59.500,80.500,80.500)
geographic Greenland
Petermann Gletscher
geographic_facet Greenland
Petermann Gletscher
genre glacier
Greenland
Ice Shelf
Journal of Glaciology
Petermann gletscher
genre_facet glacier
Greenland
Ice Shelf
Journal of Glaciology
Petermann gletscher
op_source Journal of Glaciology, vol 42, iss 142
op_relation qt36d8b95c
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/36d8b95c
op_rights CC-BY
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