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Close view of 2008 Arctic Sea Ice from AMSR-E

Sea ice is frozen seawater floating on the surface of the ocean. Some sea ice is semi-permanent, persisting from year to year, and some is seasonal, melting and refreezing from season to season. The sea ice cover reaches its minimum extent at the end of each summer and the remaining ice is called the perennial ice cover.

The AMSR-E instrument on the Aqua satellite acquires high resolution measurements of the 89 GHz brightness temperature near the poles. Because this is a passive microwave sensor which is not so sensitive to atmospheric effects, this sensor is able to observe the entire polar region every day, even through clouds and snowfall. The false color of the sea ice, derived from the AMSR-E 6.25 km 89 GHz brightness temperature, highlights the fissures or divergence areas in the sea ice cover by warm brightness temperatures (in blue) while cold brightness temperatures, shown in brighter white, represent consolidated sea ice. The sea ice edge identifies areas containing at least 15% ice concentration in the three-day moving average of the AMSR-E 12.5 km sea ice concentration data.

This animation shows the continuos motion of the Arctic sea ice from January 1 through September 12, 2008 when the sea ice reached the annual minimum extent of 4.52 million square kilometers (1.74 million square miles). This minimum is the second lowest extent recorded since 1979 and is below the 1979 to 2000 average minimum by 2.24 million square kilometers (0.86 million square miles).


The animation of Arctic sea ice from January 1 through September 12, with a two second hold on September 12, 2008. The date is displayed in the upper left corner.    The animation of Arctic sea ice from January 1 through September 12, with a two second hold on September 12, 2008. The date is displayed in the upper left corner.
Duration: 36.0 seconds
Available formats:
  1280x720 (30 fps) MPEG-4   30 MB
  640x360 (30 fps) MPEG-4   6 MB
  1280x720 (30 fps) MPEG-2   106 MB
  512x288 (30 fps) MPEG-1   18 MB
  320x180     PNG           277 KB
  160x80       PNG           66 KB
  80x40         PNG           17 KB
  1280x720 (30 fps) Frames (SeaIce w dates)
  1280x720 (60 fps) Frames (SeaIce w dates)
How to play our movies


The animation of Arctic sea ice from January 1 through September 12, with a two second hold on September 12, 2008.    The animation of Arctic sea ice from January 1 through September 12, with a two second hold on September 12, 2008.
Duration: 36.0 seconds
Available formats:
  1280x720 (30 fps) MPEG-4   30 MB
  640x360 (30 fps) MPEG-4   6 MB
  1280x720 (30 fps) MPEG-2   106 MB
  512x288 (30 fps) MPEG-1   18 MB
  320x180     PNG           275 KB
  1280x720 (30 fps) Frames (SeaIce)
  1280x720 (60 fps) Frames (SeaIce)
How to play our movies


The date sequence with an alpha channel.    The date sequence with an alpha channel.

Available formats:
  320x180     PNG           1 KB
  1280x720 (30 fps) Frames (Date overlay)
  1280x720 (60 fps) Frames (Date overlay)
How to play our movies


Image of Arctic sea ice on September 12, 2008 when the sea ice reached the minimum extent of 4.52 million square kilometers (1.74 million square miles).    Image of Arctic sea ice on September 12, 2008 when the sea ice reached the minimum extent of 4.52 million square kilometers (1.74 million square miles).

Available formats:
  3840 x 2160     TIFF 12 MB
  320 x 180         PNG 278 KB


Image of Arctic sea ice on March 10, 2008 when the sea ice reached the annual minimum extent of 15.21 million square kilometers (5.87 million square miles).    Image of Arctic sea ice on March 10, 2008 when the sea ice reached the annual minimum extent of 15.21 million square kilometers (5.87 million square miles).

Available formats:
  3840 x 2160     TIFF 9 MB
  320 x 180         PNG 262 KB

Animation Number:3561
Animator:Cindy Starr (SVS) (Lead)
Completed:2008-09-14
Producer:Jefferson Beck (UMBC)
Instrument:Aqua/AMSR-E
Data sets:Daily L3 6.25 km 89 GHz Brightness Temperature (Tb)
 AMSR-E Level 3 12.5 km Sea Ice Concentration
Data Collected:2008-01-01 through 2008-09-12
Keywords:
DLESE >> Cryology
SVS >> HDTV
DLESE >> Physical oceanography
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Sea Ice
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Snow/Ice
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Hydrosphere >> Snow/Ice
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Oceans >> Sea Ice
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Sea Ice >> Ice Extent
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Sea Ice >> Ice Growth/Melt
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Sea Ice >> Ice Types
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Sea Ice >> Pack Ice
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Sea Ice >> Sea Ice Concentration
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Sea Ice >> Sea Ice Motion
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Snow/Ice >> Freeze/Thaw
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Snow/Ice >> Ice Extent
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Snow/Ice >> Ice Growth/Melt
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Cryosphere >> Snow/Ice >> Ice Motion
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Hydrosphere >> Snow/Ice >> Ice Extent
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Hydrosphere >> Snow/Ice >> Ice Motion
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Oceans >> Sea Ice >> Ice Extent
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Oceans >> Sea Ice >> Ice Growth/Melt
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Oceans >> Sea Ice >> Pack Ice
 
 
Please give credit for this item to
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio The Blue Marble Next Generation data is courtesy of Reto Stockli (NASA/GSFC).


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