Methane Increase over the Barents and Kara Seas after the Autumn Pycnocline Breakdown: Satellite Observations

Lenoid Yurganov, Frank Muller-Karger, Ira Leifer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Seven operative thermal infrared (TIR) spectrometers launched at sun-synchronous polar orbits supply huge amounts of information about Arctic methane (CH 4 ) year-round, day and night. TIR data are unique for estimating CH 4 emissions from a Arctic warming, both terrestrial and marine. This report is based on publicly available CH 4 concentrations retrieved by NOAA and NASA from spectra of TIR radiation delivered by EU IASI and US AIRS sounders. Data were filtered for high thermal contrast in the troposphere. Validation versus aircraft measurements at three US continental sites reveal a reduced, but still significant sensitivity to CH 4anomalies in the troposphere below 4 km of altitude. The focus area is the Barents and Kara seas (BKS). BKS is impacted with warm Atlantic water and mostly free of sea ice. It is a shelf area with vast deposits of oil and natural gas (~90% CH 4 ), as well as methane hydrates and submarine permafrost. Although in summer AIRS and IASI observe no significant difference in CH 4 between BKS and N. Atlantic, a strong, monthly positive CH 4 spatial anomaly of up to 30 ppb occurs during late autumn–winter. One of explanations of this increase is a fall/winter pycnocline breakdown after a period of blocked mixing caused by a stable density seawater stratification in summer: enhanced mixing lets CH 4 to reach the sea surface and atmosphere.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalAdvances in Polar Science
Volume30
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2019

Disciplines

  • Life Sciences

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