The International Polar Year has historical roots that dates back 125 years. This is the fourth such effort, and runs from March 2007 to March 2009. As in prior Polar Years, the aim is to collect information regarding remote polar regions, so as to build new knowledge about them. ASCOS is an international and interdisciplinary research expedition to the central Arctic Ocean, and is intended to increase our knowledge of clouds and their role in the Arctic climate system.
The research conducted within the ASCOS framework requires advanced logistics and technology. The Swedish Polar Research Secretariat is responsible for logistics and for access to the icebreaker Oden, an important research platform key to the success of this expedition.
Most ASCOS activities will be carried out over 40 days in the Arctic Ocean, near the North Pole, while Oden is anchored to drifting sea ice. The research will be conducted on board, on the ice, during flights with a tethered balloon, a helicopter and a land-based research aircraft.
The ASCOS research is international and interdisciplinary, and encompasses marine biology, gas and aerosol chemistry, aerosol physics, oceanography, and meteorology. The scientific work is being coordinated from Stockholm University, and involves groups of researchers from universities and research institutes in over 10 countries. ASCOS is financed mainly by the Swedish Research Council, Formas, and the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation in Sweden, by the EU, and by the National Science Foundation in the USA.
The climate is changing more rapidly in the Arctic than anywhere else on earth, with serious consequences for flora and fauna and for the Arctic human population. Understanding how current climate changes are affecting the Arctic and its interaction with the global climate system is vital to making projections about the future. Clouds play a key role in the Arctic climate by regulating surface energy fluxes that affect how the sea ice freezes and melts.
The goal of ASCOS is to increase our knowledge of clouds over the central Arctic Ocean by studying processes that are important to their formation and occurrence. This will be achieved through interdisciplinary studies in which cloud formation is linked to the microbiological life in the ocean and ice, by means of detailed observations made from several hundred metres below the ocean’s surface to many kilometres up in the atmosphere:
ASCOS will yield unique measurements that will provide detailed information about fundamental processes involved in cloud formation in the Arctic. These findings are essential to our ability to understand the Arctic climate, its sensitivity, and its responses to anthropogenic climate change.
ASCOS is the fourth research expedition to the central Arctic Ocean to support atmospheric research; the earlier expeditions took place in 1991, 1996, and 2001. Repeated expeditions to the same area, with the same objectives, make it possible to follow up changes and variability in the Arctic, and to accumulate knowledge of ongoing climate processes occurring there. Access to the icebreaker Oden as a research platform, combined with the logistics support provided by the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat, offer researchers a unique opportunity to conduct advanced research in a highly inaccessible region.
Copyright © 2008 Swedish Polar Research Secretariat, office@polar.se.
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