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Modeled Arctic Sea Ice Thickness from 1940 through 2060: View #4
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Part of the ongoing research into polar ice trends encompasses evaluation from sophisticated computer models. At the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory at Princeton University, run by NASA's sibling agency, NOAA, researchers modeled a 5,000 year period to see how polar ice might behave over time depending on several different variables. This visualization shows a 120-year slice of that complete model, essentially offering a research window on to experimental processes that require longer time frames than human lifetimes. According to the model shown here, projecting a period from 1940 to 2060, there is evidence to suggest human factors have had a measurable effect on Arctic ice decreases.
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Arctic Sea Ice Thickness from 1940 through 2060 from the GFDL Coupled Global Climate Model
Duration: 14.0 seconds
Available formats:
352x240 (29.97 fps)
MPEG-1
1 MB
320x242
JPEG
11 KB
160x80
PNG
17 KB
80x40
PNG
5 KB
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| Animation Number: | 1078 |
| Animator: | Tom Biddlecome (Lead) |
| Studio: | SVS |
| Completed: | 2000-05-30 |
| Scientist: | Keith Dixon (NOAA/GFDL) |
| Data set: | GFDL Coupled Global Climate Model |
| Data Collected: | 1940-2060 |
| Series: | Arctic Ice |
| Video: | SVS2000-0004 * |
Keywords:
DLESE
>> Cryology
SVS
>> Ice
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More Information on this topic available at:
stories/arctic/index.html
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Please give credit for this item to NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio |
*Please note: the SVS does not fulfill requests for copies of the tapes in our library. On some of our animation pages, there is a direct link to a video distribution service from which tapes, handled by the Public Affairs Office (PAO)/Goddard TV, including some of our animations may be ordered. General information on this service can be found here. |
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