Satellite observed behavior of the Terra Nova Bay Polynya

Infrared satellite images indicate that a polynya, surrounded by a zone of loose pack ice, persisted in Terra Nova Bay, Antarctica through the winter of 1979; the feature may recur each year. The affected region (polynya nd loose pack) occupied roughly 25000 km 2 of the western Ross Sea. Throughout...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dennis D. Kurtz, David, H. Bromwich
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.669.3102
http://polarmet.osu.edu/PMG_publications/kurtz_bromwich_jgr_1983.pdf
Description
Summary:Infrared satellite images indicate that a polynya, surrounded by a zone of loose pack ice, persisted in Terra Nova Bay, Antarctica through the winter of 1979; the feature may recur each year. The affected region (polynya nd loose pack) occupied roughly 25000 km 2 of the western Ross Sea. Throughout the winter the area of open water fluctuated quasi-periodically with a period of 15-20 days. Average polynya area was 1000 km2; maximum area was approximately 5000 km 2. Fluctuations were associated with the magnitude of the zonal geostrophic wind, with a closing polynya being related to strong, persistent easterlies. An open, or opening, polynya was linked with persistent westerly or weak easterly winds and the probable descent of adiabatically warming, drift-bearing air from the plateau. This air enters Terra Nova Bay through the Reeves Glacier valley, probably as katabatic surface winds. Polynya formation was probably due to the action of these winds on the coastal pack ice, while areal fluctuations reflected the interplay between the katabatic winds and synoptic scale motions advecting ice toward and away from the bay.