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Atmospheric surface pressure over the interior of Antarctica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 May 2004

Uwe Radok
Affiliation:
CIRES, Campus Box 449, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA
Ian Allison
Affiliation:
Antarctic CRC and Australian Antarctic Division, GPO Box 252C, Hobart 7001, Australia
Gerd Wendler
Affiliation:
Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK 99775–0800, USA

Abstract

Atmospheric surface pressures on the East Antarctic ice sheet are examined as a contribution to a new regional climatology based on automatic weather stations (AWS). Monthly mean pressures along two meridional AWS lines show near the coast a semi-annual oscillation with equinoctial minima, which become submerged inland under a larger annual oscillation, asymmetrically shaped around a summer solstice peak. Such a peak could arise when air surrounding the ice sheet is heated and enabled to spread out over the ice. This concept has provided a classical prediction of the ice sheet's mean elevation; in this paper the theory is expressed in a more modern form. After the summer “flood” the vertical tropospheric circulation driving the progressive katabatic surface layer drainage from the ice sheet should create relatively higher pressures below the convergence region over the ice sheet center and lower pressures near the coast. In fact the observed mean monthly surface pressures decrease with elevation more slowly than follows from substituting the observed mean temperature-elevation gradients (“topographical lapse rates”) in the hydrostatic equation. However, below the surface inversion along the sloping ice sheet surface the hydrostatic balance is shown to be governed by temperatures higher than observed at the surface. Hydrostatic pressures are calculated with climatic estimates of the inversion strength. Their differences from the observed monthly mean surface pressures represent non-hydrostatic residuals which can be added to pressures at the coast to form elevation-free (“sea level”) pressure profiles. These show both the expected coastal troughs and high pressure over an ice sheet summit (Dome C).

Type
Papers—Atmospheric Sciences
Copyright
© Antarctic Science Ltd 1996

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