The mission has 17 planned flights over different parts of the continent, focusing on the ice sheet, glaciers, and sea ice in
As of the landing of the October 27 flight, completed targets included: three flights over glaciers, two over sea ice, one over the Getz ice shelf, and one to study the topography of the ice sheet on the mission's closest approach to the South Pole.
The Getz Ice Shelf was the target of the first flight on October 16. Thwaites Glacier was the focus of the flight on October 18, with Pine Island Glacier the target of a high-altitude flight on October20 and a low-altitude flight on October 27.
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The mission's first sea ice flightt on October 21 over the Bellingshausen and Amundsen seas was a "pioneering flight," according to Martin. "We don' know what the thickness of the sea ice is here. These will be the first direct measurements of sea ice in this area. This area is important because it is the only Antarctic sector where the sea ice is actually retreating."
Martin was excited about the prospect that the combined data from two different instruments would give scientists a new way to make more accurate measurements of sea ice thickness. Thickness of sea ice is estimated from measurements of the depth of the snow and ice visible above the sea surface. But scientists have not been able to distinguish accurately how much of this material above the sea is snow and how much is ice. An accurate measurement of the two is needed to improve their calculation of overall ice thickness.
"With this flight we did something that has not been done successfully before," says Martin. "We flew snow radar from the
The second sea ice flight on October 24 flew over the
The farthest flight of the mission took place on Oct. 25. The target was a portion of the circle of latitude at 86 degrees south. This area has been intensely mapped by NASA's ICESat satellite because the spacecraft's orbit only goes as far south as this latitude. By remapping the ICESat data points with another laser-based topographic instrument -- the Land, Vegetation, and Ice Sensor (LVIS) -- scientists hope to improve the accuracy of the ICESat data record and prepare to extend these critical ice surface change observations into the future.
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