March 23, 2007
GRAVITY MEASUREMENTS HELP MELT ICE MYSTERIES
Just
a few years ago, the world's
climate scientists predicted that
These
new data come from the
NASA/German Aerospace Center's Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment
(Grace).
Launched in March 2002, the twin Grace satellites circle the globe
using
gravity to map changes in Earth's mass 500 kilometers (310 miles)
below. They
are providing a unique way to monitor and understand Earth's great ice
sheets
and glaciers.
Grace measurements have revealed that in just four years, from 2002 to
2006,
"Before Grace, the change of Greenland's ice sheet was inferred by a
combination of more regional radar and altimeter studies pieced
together over
many years, but Grace can measure changes in the weight of the ice
directly and
cover the entire ice sheet of Greenland every month," says Michael
Watkins, Grace project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena,
Calif. However, as anyone who has ever been concerned about his or her
weight
knows, a number on a scale is just the beginning. In the five years
that Grace
has been flying, scientists have found ways to make the most of this
new set of
observations.
"Grace
has a big footprint," says Watkins. "We can locate
regions of greatest loss, but we can't see individual glaciers."
However,
Grace's spatial resolution is continually improving. In the most recent
studies, he says, Grace has observed large ice losses in the southeast
of
While
To confirm just how much of the mass Grace detects in Greenland and
"A long time ago during the last ice age, this region was pushed down
by
even more snow and ice, and now this mantle wants to come back, or
rebound," explains Erik Ivins, a JPL Earth scientist and Grace science
team member.
One way to look at the problem, says Ivins, is to imagine a bathtub
filling up
with water from a faucet but losing water from holes in the bottom of
the tub.
At the same time, the bathtub may be changing shape.
Ivins and his colleagues are refining the computer models used to
understand
and predict post-glacial rebound. It turns out that beneath the ice
sheet
covering
As Grace celebrates its fifth birthday and begins its extended mission,
"we're getting the picture into better focus," says Watkins,
"and we're going to have a new wave of discoveries. Improving the
post-glacial
rebound model is going to help, especially in
While Grace provides a new and independent way to study Earth's ice
sheets, it
will take a combination of different tools, including laser altimeters,
radar,
and field studies, to sort out more clearly what's happening. "All
technologies have different strengths and weaknesses," says Watkins.
"Grace is the new piece. It shows us the big picture, while other
measurements
look at a smaller scale. We need to use them all together."
"We have to pay attention," Velicogna adds. "These ice sheets
are changing much faster than we were expecting. Observations are the
most
powerful tool we have to know what is going on, especially when the
changes -
and what's causing them - are not obvious."
For
more information and images,
visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/grace-20070320.html
##
Contact:
Alan Buis
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
818-354-0474
This text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/grace-20070320.html