Theoretical estimates of light transmittance at the MOSAiC Central Observatory

Don Perovich, Bonnie Light, Madison M. Smith, Melinda Webster, Marika M. Holland, David Clemens-Sewall, Ian A. Raphael, Chris Polashenski, Andrew P. Barrett, Christopher J. Cox, Polona Itkin, Felix Linhardt, Amy R. Macfarlane, Marcel Nicolaus, Natascha Oppelt, Matthew D. Shupe, Julienne Stroeve, Ran Tao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Light transmission through a sea ice cover has strong implications for the heat content of the upper ocean, the magnitude of bottom and lateral ice melt, and primary productivity in the ocean. Light transmittance in the vicinity of the Multidisciplinary Drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) Central Observatory was estimated by driving a two-stream radiative transfer model with physical property observations. Data include point and transect observations of snow depth, surface scattering layer thickness, ice thickness, and pond depth. The temporal evolution of light transmittance at specific sites and the spatial variability along transect lines were computed. Ponds transmitted 4–6 times as much solar energy per unit area as bare ice. On July 25, ponds covered about 18% of the area and contributed roughly 50% of the sunlight transmitted through the ice cover. Approximating the transmittance along a transect line using average values for the physical properties will always result in lower light transmittance than finding the average light transmittance using the full distribution of points. Transmitted solar energy calculated using the standard five ice thickness categories and three surface types used in the Los Alamos sea ice model CICE, the sea ice component of many weather and climate models, was only about 1 W m-2 less than using all the points along the transect. This minor difference suggests that the important processes and resulting feedbacks relating to solar transmittance can be represented in models that use five or more categories of ice thickness distributions.

Original languageEnglish
Article number00076
JournalElementa
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 22 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Light transmittance variability
  • Optical properties
  • Sea ice

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