GSTM2020-71
https://doi.org/10.5194/gstm2020-71
GRACE/GRACE-FO Science Team Meeting 2020
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Update on GRACE/GRACE-FO continuity in mass loss of the glaciers and big ice sheets.

Isabella Velicogna1,2, Mohajerani Yara1, Enrico Ciraci1, Felix Landerer2, and David Wiese2
Isabella Velicogna et al.
  • 1University of California Irvine, Earth System Science, Irvine, United States of America (isabella@uci.edu)
  • 2NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena CA

The GRACE missions have changed the way that we measure mass changes of ice sheets, glaciers and ice caps, with quantied uncertainties that factor processing errors, atmospheric and oceanic corrections, and removal of glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA). We present GRACE/GRACE-FO estimates of mass balance over the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets and the World’s glaciers and ice caps (GIC). The data gap between missions is filled with GRACE-calibrated results from the input-output method for ice sheets and surface mass balance (SMB) reconstructions from regional atmospheric climate models and MERRA-2 reanalysis data for the glaciers and ice caps. Over Greenland, we report low losses during the cold years of 2017-2018 followed by record melt in 2019 and an onset of rapid melt for 2020. As warm air and ocean masses get blocked over Greenland more frequently because of interactions between the wobbling jet stream and topography, we observe more high melt events in this decade than recorded in prior centuries. In Antarctica, the ongoing rapid loss in West Antarctica dominates the mass balance, but we observe a steady increase in snowfall in the Atlantic sector of East Antarctica. The exercise provides a mass balance record that can be continuously improved with better corrections and improved processing, with reduced errors, so that we can provide better constraints for ice sheet models in charge of sea level projections and improve the validation of various Earth system models and global climate models.

How to cite: Velicogna, I., Yara, M., Ciraci, E., Landerer, F., and Wiese, D.: Update on GRACE/GRACE-FO continuity in mass loss of the glaciers and big ice sheets., GRACE/GRACE-FO Science Team Meeting 2020, online, 27–29 Oct 2020, GSTM2020-71, https://doi.org/10.5194/gstm2020-71, 2020.