Constraints on snow accumulation and firn density in Greenland using GPS receivers

Publication date

2015

Authors

Larson, Kristine
Wahr, John
Kuipers Munneke, P.ISNI 0000000392156952

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Data from three continuously operating GPS sites located in the interior of the Greenland ice sheet are analyzed. Traditionally these kinds of GPS installations (where the GPS antenna is placed on a pole deployed into the firn) are used to estimate the local horizontal speed and direction of the ice sheet. However, these data are also sensitive to the vertical displacement of the pole as it moves through the firn layer. A new method developed to measure snow depth variations with reflected GPS signals is applied to these GPS data from Greenland. This method provides a constraint on the vertical distance between the GPS antenna and the surface snow layer. The vertical positions and snow surface heights are then used to assess output from surface accumulation and firn densification models, showing agreement better than 10% at the sites with the longest records. Comparisons between the GPS reflection method and in situ snow sensors at the Dye-2 site show good agreement, capturing the dramatic changes observed in Greenland during the 2012 summer melt season. The geocentric elevation of the snow surface can be inferred by subtracting the snow surface height estimates from the vertical position measurements. It should be possible to use those surface elevation estimates to help validate elevation results obtained from satellite altimetry.

Keywords

accumulation, ice dynamics, ice velocity, polar firn, snow

Citation

Larson, K, Wahr, J & Kuipers Munneke, P 2015, 'Constraints on snow accumulation and firn density in Greenland using GPS receivers', Journal of Glaciology, vol. 61, no. 225. https://doi.org/10.3189/2015JoG14J130