NPS Team Completes Remote Arctic
Research Expedition
by Matthew Schehl, Naval
Postgraduate School February 21, 2019
Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) scientists and students
experienced the heart of the desolate Arctic on an expedition which
will deepen our understanding of a rapidly retreating northern ice
pack.
The arduous, five-week voyage aboard the polar
icebreaker USCGC Healy (WAGB-20), the Coast Guard’s largest and most
technologically-advanced research vessel, forged deep into the
volatile sea ice of the eastern Beaufort Sea to deploy a series of
NPS-developed Autonomous Ocean Flux Buoys (AOFB), which will
continuously monitor the delicate balance between ocean, ice and
sun.
“We are studying the changes in density gradients in the
upper ocean that are contributing to the massive late summer ice
retreat we now see in the central Arctic,” explained Tim Stanton,
NPS oceanography professor emeritus. “A decade ago, by late summer,
there was a 500-mile strip of open water near the Alaskan and
Canadian coasts, whereas now there is four to six times this area of
open water by the end of summer.”
The U.S. Navy recognizes
the geopolitical ramifications of these changes, which open a range
of shipping and mineral exploration possibilities, and recently
re-established a high latitude research program through the Office
of Naval Research (ONR) to better predict how, when and why the
perennial ice pack will shift form.
This five-year research
initiative - Stratified Ocean Dynamics of the Arctic (SODA) - will
provide a more granular understanding of how underwater conditions
impact the ice in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas as changing heat
flows move and mix through the upper stratification of the water.
The NPS team, along with five other groups, set sail September
14, 2018 from Dutch Harbor in the Aleutian Islands for the 35-day
mission.
A group of researchers, including NPS scientists and students, are
pictured during an Arctic expedition to deploy observation buoys in
the eastern Beaufort Sea. The Office of Naval Research funded
program will examine how changes in Arctic sea ice growth and
retreat effect the sea, the greater Arctic region, and its acoustic
environment. (Photo courtesy of Dr. Tim Stanton, NPS oceanography
professor emeritus)
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Stanton and principal investigator Bill Shaw, along with NPS
graduate students Lt. Terrance Green, Lt. j.g. Rosyln Albee, and
Moss Landing Marine Laboratories graduate student Amanda Camarato,
headed to approximately 80 degrees north latitude, where they – in
the company of polar bears, whales, and seals – installed the buoys
on ice floes.
“Our basic research is directed at improving
coupled ocean models of this ice retreat by identifying physical
processes not currently in the regional numerical models to improve
their prediction skills,” Stanton said.
“This project is
looking further down in the water column using additional
instrumentation on our AOFBs to understand how the increased flow of
Pacific water into the Arctic is contributing to melting the ice
pack,” he added. “Heat is trapped in the salinity density gradients,
so we are measuring processes that allow this heat to travel up to
the surface mixed layer, where it can melt ice.”
The
strategically placed AOFBs will provide visibility on this process
over time.
The data the buoys collect will be transmitted
twice daily via satellite back to researchers at NPS, allowing them
to track turbulence fluxes of water movement, heat and salt below
the ice over the long term.
“We hope to quantify how changes
in the Arctic system in general, and in declining ice cover in
particular, are affecting the physical environment within the Arctic
Ocean,” Shaw said. “For example, do increasing areas of open water
enhance the exchange of energy and heat between ocean and
atmosphere?”
The AOFBs consist of two main components: a
surface buoy that nestles on the ice and an instrument package which
probes the depths below by a series of poles descending from the
buoy.
The buoy houses a GPS processing electronics that
calculate position and ice velocity; an Iridium antennae; and
batteries which sustain a longevity of the system for two years. The
instrument package also includes a downward looking 300 kHz Acoustic
Doppler Current Profiler and a custom-built flux package.
“We
will monitor the inbound data streams every day and adjust the
sampling scheme in response to events such as strong storms while
keeping within our limited power budget,” Stanton said. “The
graduate students will be looking at different aspects of the data
set as it comes in, while also receiving and processing satellite
imagery of the area to complete their thesis projects.”
Traveling to the Arctic on this project provides the graduate
students with invaluable experience as they embark on their own
careers.
While their NPS coursework in Meteorology and
Oceanography lays a solid foundation in the mathematics and physics
necessary to investigate the underlying processes contributing to
the significant polar ice melt rates, participating in the Arctic
expedition gives them the chance to cut their teeth in the field.
“I gained a better understanding of how heat and freshwater
distribution in the Arctic Ocean relate to the transfer of buoyancy
and momentum between the atmosphere, ice and upper ocean,” Green
said.
“The SODA project provided me the opportunity to meet,
learn and form lasting relationships with some of the leading
scientists in the field of polar oceanography,” he continued. “Being
under the advisement of Professor Stanton and Bill Shaw coupled with
this experience and the prospective data sets from the AOFB have
afforded me the opportunity to produce a thesis worthy of
publishing.”
The expedition was a resounding success, Stanton
said, and the team is now setting their sights on receiving the
data.
“Completing a deployment is rewarding, and so is using
the new observations to help answer questions about the Arctic
system,” Shaw said. “Our participation in the program shows that NPS
is at the leading edge of physical oceanography research in the
Arctic.”
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