The Roland von Glasow Air-Sea-Ice Chamber (RvG-ASIC): An experimental facility for studying ocean-sea-ice-atmosphere interactions

Sea ice is difficult, expensive, and potentially dangerous to observe in nature. The remoteness of the Arctic Ocean and Southern Ocean complicates sampling logistics, while the heterogeneous nature of sea ice and rapidly changing environmental conditions present challenges for conducting process stu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
Main Authors: Thomas, M., France, J., Crabeck, O., Hall, B., Hof, V., Notz, D., Rampai, T., Riemenschneider, L., John Tooth, O., Tranter, M., Kaiser, J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0008-2D4B-3
http://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0008-2D4D-1
Description
Summary:Sea ice is difficult, expensive, and potentially dangerous to observe in nature. The remoteness of the Arctic Ocean and Southern Ocean complicates sampling logistics, while the heterogeneous nature of sea ice and rapidly changing environmental conditions present challenges for conducting process studies. Here, we describe the Roland von Glasow Air-Sea-Ice Chamber (RvG-ASIC), a laboratory facility designed to reproduce polar processes and overcome some of these challenges. The RvG-ASIC is an open-topped 3.5m3 glass tank housed in a cold room (temperature range: 55 to C30 C). The RvG-ASIC is equipped with a wide suite of instruments for ocean, sea ice, and atmospheric measurements, as well as visible and UV lighting. The infrastructure, available instruments, and typical experimental protocols are described. To characterise some of the technical capabilities of our facility, we have quantified the timescale over which our chamber exchanges gas with the outside, l D .0:660:07/ d, and the mixing rate of our experimental ocean, m D .4:2 0:1/ min. Characterising our light field, we show that the light intensity across the tank varies by less than 10% near the centre of the tank but drops to as low as 60% of the maximum intensity in one corner. The temperature sensitivity of our light sources over the 400 to 700 nm range (PAR) is .0:0280:003/Wm2 C1, with a maximum irradiance of 26.4Wm2 at 0 C; over the 320 to 380 nm range, it is .0:160:1/Wm2 C1, with a maximum irradiance of 5.6Wm2 at 0 C. We also present results characterising our experimental sea ice. The extinction coefficient for PAR varies from 3.7 to 6.1m1 when calculated from irradiance measurements exterior to the sea ice and from 4.4 to 6.2m1 when calculated from irradiance measurements within the sea ice. The bulk salinity of our experimental sea ice is measured using three techniques, modelled using a halo-dynamic one-dimensional (1D) gravity drainage model, and calculated from a salt and mass budget. The growth rate of our sea ice is between 2 and 4 cm d1 ...