Sensitivity of Arctic Sea Ice Extent to Sea Ice Concentration Threshold Choice and Its Implication to Ice Coverage Decadal Trends and Statistical Projections

Arctic sea ice extent has been utilized to monitor sea ice changes since the late 1970s using remotely sensed sea ice data derived from passive microwave (PM) sensors. A 15% sea ice concentration threshold value has been used traditionally when computing sea ice extent (SIE), although other threshol...

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Published in:Remote Sensing
Main Authors: Jessica L. Matthews, Ge Peng, Walter N. Meier, Otis Brown
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12050807
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2072-4292/12/5/807/ 2023-08-20T04:03:36+02:00 Sensitivity of Arctic Sea Ice Extent to Sea Ice Concentration Threshold Choice and Its Implication to Ice Coverage Decadal Trends and Statistical Projections Jessica L. Matthews Ge Peng Walter N. Meier Otis Brown agris 2020-03-03 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12050807 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rs12050807 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Remote Sensing; Volume 12; Issue 5; Pages: 807 arctic sea ice decadal trend passive microwave sensors sea ice concentration sea ice extent Text 2020 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12050807 2023-07-31T23:11:10Z Arctic sea ice extent has been utilized to monitor sea ice changes since the late 1970s using remotely sensed sea ice data derived from passive microwave (PM) sensors. A 15% sea ice concentration threshold value has been used traditionally when computing sea ice extent (SIE), although other threshold values have been employed. Does the rapid depletion of Arctic sea ice potentially alter the basic characteristics of Arctic ice extent? In this paper, we explore whether and how the statistical characteristics of Arctic sea ice have changed during the satellite data record period of 1979–2017 and examine the sensitivity of sea ice extents and their decadal trends to sea ice concentration threshold values. Threshold choice can affect the timing of annual SIE minimums: a threshold choice as low as 30% can change the timing to August instead of September. Threshold choice impacts the value of annual SIE minimums: in particular, changing the threshold from 15% to 35% can change the annual SIE by more than 10% in magnitude. Monthly SIE data distributions are seasonally dependent. Although little impact was seen for threshold choice on data distributions during annual minimum times (August and September), there is a strong impact in May. Threshold choices were not found to impact the choice of optimal statistical models characterizing annual minimum SIE time series. However, the first ice-free Arctic summer year (FIASY) estimates are impacted; higher threshold values produce earlier FIASY estimates and, more notably, FIASY estimates amongst all considered models are more consistent. This analysis suggests that some of the threshold choice impacts to SIE trends may actually be the result of biased data due to surface melt. Given that the rapid Arctic sea ice depletion appears to have statistically changed SIE characteristics, particularly in the summer months, a more extensive investigation to verify surface melt impacts on this data set is warranted. Text Arctic Sea ice MDPI Open Access Publishing Arctic Remote Sensing 12 5 807
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic arctic
sea ice
decadal trend
passive microwave sensors
sea ice concentration
sea ice extent
spellingShingle arctic
sea ice
decadal trend
passive microwave sensors
sea ice concentration
sea ice extent
Jessica L. Matthews
Ge Peng
Walter N. Meier
Otis Brown
Sensitivity of Arctic Sea Ice Extent to Sea Ice Concentration Threshold Choice and Its Implication to Ice Coverage Decadal Trends and Statistical Projections
topic_facet arctic
sea ice
decadal trend
passive microwave sensors
sea ice concentration
sea ice extent
description Arctic sea ice extent has been utilized to monitor sea ice changes since the late 1970s using remotely sensed sea ice data derived from passive microwave (PM) sensors. A 15% sea ice concentration threshold value has been used traditionally when computing sea ice extent (SIE), although other threshold values have been employed. Does the rapid depletion of Arctic sea ice potentially alter the basic characteristics of Arctic ice extent? In this paper, we explore whether and how the statistical characteristics of Arctic sea ice have changed during the satellite data record period of 1979–2017 and examine the sensitivity of sea ice extents and their decadal trends to sea ice concentration threshold values. Threshold choice can affect the timing of annual SIE minimums: a threshold choice as low as 30% can change the timing to August instead of September. Threshold choice impacts the value of annual SIE minimums: in particular, changing the threshold from 15% to 35% can change the annual SIE by more than 10% in magnitude. Monthly SIE data distributions are seasonally dependent. Although little impact was seen for threshold choice on data distributions during annual minimum times (August and September), there is a strong impact in May. Threshold choices were not found to impact the choice of optimal statistical models characterizing annual minimum SIE time series. However, the first ice-free Arctic summer year (FIASY) estimates are impacted; higher threshold values produce earlier FIASY estimates and, more notably, FIASY estimates amongst all considered models are more consistent. This analysis suggests that some of the threshold choice impacts to SIE trends may actually be the result of biased data due to surface melt. Given that the rapid Arctic sea ice depletion appears to have statistically changed SIE characteristics, particularly in the summer months, a more extensive investigation to verify surface melt impacts on this data set is warranted.
format Text
author Jessica L. Matthews
Ge Peng
Walter N. Meier
Otis Brown
author_facet Jessica L. Matthews
Ge Peng
Walter N. Meier
Otis Brown
author_sort Jessica L. Matthews
title Sensitivity of Arctic Sea Ice Extent to Sea Ice Concentration Threshold Choice and Its Implication to Ice Coverage Decadal Trends and Statistical Projections
title_short Sensitivity of Arctic Sea Ice Extent to Sea Ice Concentration Threshold Choice and Its Implication to Ice Coverage Decadal Trends and Statistical Projections
title_full Sensitivity of Arctic Sea Ice Extent to Sea Ice Concentration Threshold Choice and Its Implication to Ice Coverage Decadal Trends and Statistical Projections
title_fullStr Sensitivity of Arctic Sea Ice Extent to Sea Ice Concentration Threshold Choice and Its Implication to Ice Coverage Decadal Trends and Statistical Projections
title_full_unstemmed Sensitivity of Arctic Sea Ice Extent to Sea Ice Concentration Threshold Choice and Its Implication to Ice Coverage Decadal Trends and Statistical Projections
title_sort sensitivity of arctic sea ice extent to sea ice concentration threshold choice and its implication to ice coverage decadal trends and statistical projections
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12050807
op_coverage agris
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Sea ice
op_source Remote Sensing; Volume 12; Issue 5; Pages: 807
op_relation https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rs12050807
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12050807
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