Arctic "death spiral" or dead sensor?

As many readers have noted, one of the Arctic sea ice extent plots on our WUWT sea ice page took a Serreze style nosedive today:

Source: http://ocean.dmi.dk/arctic/plots/icecover/icecover_current.png

According to DMI (Danish Meteorological Institute), this is the source of the data:

The ice extent values are calculated from the ice type data from the Ocean and Sea Ice, Satellite Application Facility (OSISAF), where areas with ice concentration higher than 30% are classified as ice.

And when I backtrace from OSISAF to find what satellite/sensor they used, this is what they say:

Data used: SSM/I (DMSP F15), ECMWF forecast for atmospheric correction

The glitch is reminiscent of the Feb 2009 failure of an SSMI sensor used by NSIDC.

That failure showed up on NSIDC’s plot, and when I pointed it out with a blog post NSIDC responded that it “isn’t worth blogging about“.

nsidc_extent_timeseries_021509

Click for larger image

A couple of days later they were forced by the failure of the sensor to take their data offline, so apparently it was worth blogging about after all.

They wrote in the press release at the time:

Last year, F13 started showing large amounts of missing data. The sensor was almost 13 years old, and no longer provided complete daily data to allow us to track total daily sea ice extent. As a result, we switched to the DMSP F15 sensor for our near-real-time analysis.

And as noted above, DMI uses SSM/I (DMSP F15), the same as NSIDC. Is this glitch worth blogging about? I think so since NSIDC was unaware last time that a problem had developed until we pointed it out for them.

This looks like the beginning of the problem on August 6th, as seen at the OSI SAF page:

Source: http://saf.met.no/p/ice/nh/conc/imgs/OSI_HL_SAF_201108061200_pal.jpg

The day before on August 5th:

Source: http://saf.met.no/p/ice/nh/conc/imgs/OSI_HL_SAF_201108051200_pal.jpg

It may be related to the three Coronal Mass Ejections, (CME) that hit Earth about that time. From Spaceweather.com

Earth’s magnetic field is still reverberating from a CME strike on August 5th that sparked one of the strongest geomagnetic storms in years. Registering 8 on the 0 to 9 “K-index” scale of magnetic disturbances, the storm at maximum sparked auroras across Europe and in many northern-tier US states.

It is possible the satellite operator shut down the bird for protection, but nobody got the memo. There’s no mention of data outages on NSIDC’s page or at CT or other ice product websites that I’ve found. Or, the sensor data might be so corrupt as to be unusable, or the sensor has been fried by the CME.

So, like before, I’ll send NSIDC’s Dr. Walt Meier a courtesy note on this one and see what he says. NSIDC’s plot averages over 5 days, IIRC, so it won’t show up for a few days and they have time to correct it if in fact it is the satellite sensor data again.

This may be a sensor issue, or it may be an algorithm issue. Since other plots aren’t showing it, we know it doesn’t represent a real loss of ice, just loss of data.

Curiously though, I’ve noted another glitch half a world away:

Source: http://www.iup.uni-bremen.de:8084/amsr/ice_ext_s.png

Which looks to be unrelated, since it is the AMSR-E sensor on a different satellite.

Must be the day for glitches in sea ice.

Meanwhile, Row to the Pole‘s progress is slowing to a crawl:

Must be a sea ice glitch of a different kind.

UPDATE:

Dr.Walt Meier of NSIDC responds:

Hi Anthony,

This is quite clearly a data issue. We don’t work with the F15 satellite

anymore – we’ve been using the sensor on the newer F17 satellite, so I

can’t say if it is a a sensor problem or a processing issue at DMI. I

could be the CME, though it doesn’t seem to have affected the F17

sensor. From the image, it looks to be a missing swath of data, perhaps

from CME, perhaps from some other issue. A missing swath is not

particularly unexpected. Sometimes the data can be recovered later and

added in, sometimes not. The AMSR-E issue in the Antarctic also appears

to be due to one or more missing swaths of data on Aug. 5:

http://www.iup.uni-bremen.de:8084/amsredata/asi_daygrid_swath/l1a/s6250/2011/aug/asi-s6250-20110805-v5_nic.png

In our images, as you point out, we do a 5-day averaging to remove the

noise, often errors due to ephemeral weather effects, from the

timeseries. This avoids the day-to-day ups and downs that can be

misleading and provides a more representative overall trajectory (though

we do get occasional wiggles from the preliminary data used in the 5-day

data that is later replaced).

For the timeseries plot, we also interpolate over missing data (such as

a missing swath) using data for that region from the day before and

(when it becomes available) the day after. However, there doesn’t appear

to be any missing swaths in our F17 data over the last several days.

Info on the sensor we use and the interpolation are explained on our

website here:

http://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/disclaimer1.html

You’re welcome to print the above, though if you do, I would appreciate

if you would also add the following links, where we addressed the sensor

issue and made corrections to the near-real-time data.

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/02/18/nsidc-satellite-sea-ice-sensor-has-catastrophic-failure-data-faulty-for-the-last-45-days/

And also here, where I discussed some the issues dealing with

near-real-time data from satellite sensors:

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/03/01/nsidcs-walt-meier-responds-on-the-sensor-issue/

These may be useful for new readers or to refresh other readers’

memories, such as some of the readers who posted in the comments section.

walt

——————————————-

Walt Meier, Research Scientist

National Snow and Ice Data Center

University of Colorado

UCB 449, Boulder, CO 80309

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Kelvin Vaughan
August 9, 2011 4:52 am

Jake says:
August 8, 2011 at 8:35 pm
So what was the problem? Was the sensor bad, did the sun somehow mess with data transmission, what?
If the sun is directly behind a satellite looking from a receiving dish, the sun will swamp any signal coming from the satellite. My guess is that the signal was lost in reflected solar noise.
Or it could have been a spurious transmission from earth. At the satellite station where I worked one of our transponders was put out of service by an Italian station carrying out test transmissions on the wrong polarity.

M.A.DeLuca II
August 9, 2011 7:59 am

The graph apparently was in error. As of this morning, it’s showing no such drop:

August 9, 2011 8:46 am

MADeLuca2 says
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/08/07/arctic-death-spiral-or-dead-sensor/#comment-715260
You forgot to give the link?
Does this mean that CNN reported on wrong figures for the July ice?

M.A.DeLuca II
August 9, 2011 9:42 am

Yep, I included it as an image tag and seem to have mucked that up. The source is the one shown at the top of the page under the graph with the defective reading. Here it is again: http://ocean.dmi.dk/arctic/plots/icecover/icecover_current.png

August 9, 2011 11:06 am

Thanks.

Svend Ferdinandsen
August 9, 2011 11:46 am

august 9, 2011.
DMI has corrected it now, so it was some sort of error.
Looks like it now has a small spike instead.

Athelstan.
August 9, 2011 1:06 pm

Mistaken identity old luv.

John B
August 9, 2011 1:34 pm


You can’t just go making up your own science.
Trust me, you are not Gallileo 🙂

August 9, 2011 11:59 pm

Sorry John, maybe you are still stuck in Galileo’s days and the science of their time,
Trust me, more than Galileo was here
http://www.letterdash.com/HenryP/the-greenhouse-effect-and-the-principle-of-re-radiation
Try following my arguments on the principles and let me know if there is anything that you don’t understand.

John B
August 10, 2011 8:02 am

Henry,
The important thing about Gallileo was not that he was persecuted, it was that he turned out to be right. If you turn out to be right, meaning that all of mainstream radiative physics is wrong, enjoy the Nobel prize that will inevitably come your way. On the other hand…
John B

August 10, 2011 8:33 am

Henry@JohnB
I know there are a few of us who have figured it all out.
I remember thinking about it during a few sleepless nights.
I am actually not aware of saying something new but if you think it is new and if it is true (which you can easily check) then perhaps, indeed, it should be getting more attention…
But it is not worth a Nobel prize.

Pamela Gray
August 10, 2011 9:36 am

The images continue to show large satellite swaths missing. That means that graphs are missing data and are relying on fill ins from other grids. Any update?

John B
August 10, 2011 12:35 pm

@Walt Meier
Any news, Walt?

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