Introduction
The work described in this paper forms part of a continuing program of measurement of the albedo of sea ice as one of the prime factors influencing the energy budget of the Arctic Basin. Two previous articles (Langleben, Reference Langleben1968,1969) presented observations which had been made of the albedo of the ice cover in Tanquary Fiord, Ellesmere Island and which indicated rapid changes in albedo values during the melting season. These papers also reviewed literature on the subject, cited references to earlier work, and stressed the scarcity of available data on the albedo of sea ice and of its variation in time and space.
The observations at Tanquary Fiord clearly indicated that the albedo of the ice cover during the melting season varied linearly with the proportion of the surface covered by puddles of water, its value decreasing as the degree of puddling increased. It was of some interest to test in other parts of the Arctic the applicability of the mathematical relationship which had been established between these variables at Tanquary Fiord. As was pointed out in the previous paper, the ice cover in Tanquary Fiord is subject to surface contamination by dust carried from the adjacent shores by strong winds. It was therefore thought desirable to make airborne measurements of the albedo sufficiently far off-shore to be rid of surface contamination. The observations were made from a helicopter and, for logistic reasons, a small area (80 km × too km) of the Beaufort Sea bordering on Tuktoyaktuk, N.W.T. (lat. 69° 26’ N., long. 133° 02’ W.) was selected for the aerial survey.
Observations
Measurements of total hemispherical incident short-wave radiation and of radiation reflected by the ice cover were obtained using two Kipp radiometers. These instruments had been calibrated before being taken into the field and were recalibrated after use following the procedure outlined in Reference LanglebenLangleben (1968). The sensitivity of each radiometer, i.e. its calibration constant, remained essentially unchanged under extremely rough treatment.
The radiometers were mounted back to back and fastened to a combined support and electrical cable of 18 m length by means of a thin trifilar suspension. The other end of the cable was attached to the sling of the helicopter and the electrical connection to a recorder in the cabin was at this point. A ground attendant was required to hold the radiometers off the ground during take-off and to retrieve them on landing.
In flying over the ice, the altitude maintained by the helicopter was typically 90 m with maximum excursions from this altitude of ± 15 m. Measurements of incident and reflected radiation were made only when the helicopter was brought to a hovering position to ensure that the radiometers were in a proper attitude with their sensing surfaces horizontal. Photographs of the ice cover were taken simultaneously with the radiation measurements using a very wide angle (94°) lens. From an altitude of 90 m, the field of view of this lens was about 210 m × 130 m, large enough to sample a representative area of the ice cover and still to provide sufficient detail of the surface features. Puddles on the ice surface had dimensions from several metres to several tens of metres.
The observations were made during the melting season in June 1969. Sixteen flights were made out of the Polar Continental Shelf Project’s base camp at Tuktoyaktuk. The flight paths were over fast ice which extended about 80 km north from Tuktoyaktuk into the Beaufort Sea. The measurements were started far off-shore where the surface was not contaminated by wind-blown dust. All of the flights, of duration typically 1 h 45 min, started after 11.00 h local time and were completed before 17.00 h. The solar altitude during the flights lay between 27° and 43° and hence the problem of interpreting the response of the Kipp radiometers at low sun elevations did not arise. Furthermore, the helicopter subtended a very small solid angle of about 0.02 steradians at the upward-facing radiometer so that for completely diffuse radiation the influence of the obstruction would be less than 0.3%. Most of the flights however were made during clear periods or when the sky was less than five-tenths overcast.
Surface conditions over the period of observation fortunately varied considerably. Several hundred photographs and simultaneous measurements of radiation were obtained of the ice cover for degrees of puddling varying from several per cent to almost 80%. The period included times when rivulets of melt water flowed over the ice surface and times when surface drainage occurred. Over the clean surface far off-shore, the area surveyed included extensive patches of relatively flat ice and other parts which were covered with networks of pressure ridges.
Analysis and Results
The photographic transparencies were projected on to sheets of paper and tracings were made to show the outline of the water puddles. The area of each puddle was measured with a planimeter and the degree of puddling was calculated from the ratio of the area of puddles to the total area shown in the photograph. The corresponding value of albedo for the ice was determined from the ratio of the radiation reflected by the surface to that incident upon it. Some 152 data points were available for analysis and these clearly indicated that the albedo A decreased with increasing degree of puddling P. As was shown in Reference LanglebenLangleben (1969) a linear relationship should exist between the albedo of the ice cover and the degree of puddling. The data therefore were fitted by a straight line A = Ai+ΔA/ΔP P using the method of least squares and the results are shown in the first row of Table I as run 1.
The intercept Ai corresponds to the albedo of the ice cover before the melt has started and δA is the deviation and σA the root-mean-square deviation of the albedo values from the line of best fit.
It is seen that in run 1, δA is quite large having a value of more than 12% of the albedo intercept. On the scatter diagram of A against P it was apparent that some of the points represented spurious observations and that these accounted in large measure for the excessive root-mean-square deviation in albedo. It is likely that these spurious data were collected on occasions when premature observations were made while the helicopter was still in motion and the radiometers may have been swinging.
The data were examined with a computer program which used an iterative process to reject albedo values whose deviation δA from the line of best fit exceeded 2 σA. Thus as a result of run 1 in Table 1, the criterion for rejection in the next run was that δA > 2 × 0.0677 and 15 data points were rejected on this basis as shown in the last column. Five such runs were made and the results are shown in Table I. It is evident that after the third run, the change in slope and albedo intercept are negligibly small. Data are being discarded without producing any change in the results obtained. Similar results were obtained, but after more runs, when the criterion for rejection was changed to δA > 30 σA.
On the basis of run 3, the data can be represented by the equation
These data (114 points) and the line fit are shown in Figure 1 where albedo A is plotted against degree of puddling P. The 38 rejected data points are compared with the chosen fit in the insert.
Discussion
Albedo values during the melt season on fast ice extending about 80 km north of Tuktoyaktuk were significantly higher (on the average, 1969) than for the ice cover in Tanquary Fiord Reference Langleben(Langleben, 1969) at similar stages of melting. As in the previous study, the albedo was found to decrease linearly with increasing degree of puddling and its rate of decrease of 0.32 agrees with the value of 0.30 for Tanquary Fiord. The data for the Beaufort Sea, extrapolated to conditions that prevail before the start of melting and at the other extreme to a fully flooded ice cover, yield values of the albedo of 0.59 and 0.27 respectively. The differences in the albedo of ice in the Beaufort Sea and in Tanquary Fiord were caused by different amounts of surface contamination. In Tanquary Fiord, the distance to the nearest shore from any point was less than three kilometres. The ice therefore was more likely to become sprinkled with wind-blown dust from shore than it was in the Beaufort Sea areas, which were tens of kilometres off-shore.
Acknowledgements
This study was supported by the National Research Council of Canada under Grant No. A-4232 with logistic support from the Polar Continental Shelf Project, Department of Energy, Mines and Resources. Mr Michael Steven assisted with the field work. The radiometers were calibrated in the laboratories of the Meteorological Branch, Department of Transport.
MS. received 8 April 1970 and in revised form 5 June 1970