Snow and Ice Program
Introduction
The National Ice Center (NIC), a tri-agency operational center, operated
by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the United
States Navy,
and the United States Coast Guard, prepares a daily Northern Hemisphere
Snow and Ice chart. This chart, prepared on a polar stereographic projection
is centered
on the North Pole with a 60 degree latitude of true scale, provides information
on the areal coverage of the snow and ice. The visible and Near-infrared
imagery
of the polar orbiting satellites (POES) and geostationary orbiting environmental
satellites (GOES) are the primary tools for the analysis of this snow and
ice cover. Low resolution visible data are augmented whenever possible
by the visible
high resolution imagery and visible GOES, GMS, MTSAT, and METEOSAT data.
In addition, ground weather observations, synthetic aperture radar (SAR),
microwave scatterometer
returns, numerical weather prediction, sea ice models, buoys, reconnaissance
flights, and various DMSP visible and microwave products are incorporated
into the daily Snow and Ice chart.
Philosophy and Purpose
Polar orbiting satellites are the only source of a complete look at the
polar areas of the earth, since their orbits cross near the poles approximately
every
two hours with 12 to 13 orbits a day of useful visible data. This visible
imagery can then be analyzed to detect the snow and ice fields and the
difference in
reflectivity of the snow and ice. By analyzing these areas each day,
areas of cloud cover over a particular area of snow and ice can be kept
to a
minimum to
allow a cloud free look at these regions. This chart can then be useful
as a measure of the extent of snow and ice for any day during the year
and it can
also be compared to previous year for climatic studies.