Boo!

Halloween 2011 at Summit Station, Greenland

On the floor, from left: Sonja Wolter, Ben Toth, and Brad Halter. Next level up on the couches from the left: Christina Hammock, Tommy Cox, Lance Roth, Ken Keenan, Russ Howes, Ed Stockard, Katrine Gorham and Tracy Sheeley. Standing from the left: Shannon Coykendall and Ben Buchwald.

The team halted turnover activities temporarily last night at Summit Station to celebrate Halloween, and as the pictures attest, folks were clearly in the mood for a costume party. “We dined on a lovely Halloween themed-meal, complete with pumpkin ghoulash and mashed potatoes with sculpted ghosts,” wrote Tracy Sheeley, Summit manager of operations.  “Quite a celebration!”

Those who’ve enjoyed reports of optical phenomenon at Summit during the early winter phase might note that CPS science technician Christina Hammock (far left) is dressed up as a sun dog.

“Everything is going smoothly for turnover,” Tracy wrote. “We got in one day late due to weather, but are moving through everything steadily.  Temps are chilly (-55F/-48C, windchill – 93F/-69C, as I type) with 16kt winds. Great group of people for both phases.”

CH2M HILL Polar Services operates Summit Station, near the highest point on Greenland’s ice sheet, for the U.S. National Science Foundation, which manages the station in cooperation with the Government of Greenland. Summit houses instruments that provide year-round, long-term measurements for monitoring and investigations of the Arctic environment.  The station is open by invitation to visiting scientists during the summer, and is accessible via ski-equipped airplane and tracked vehicle. During the winter period, which lasts from September through early April, the station is closed; but a team of five maintains the station and its ongoing experiments. CPS breaks this winter period into three, roughly 10-week phases, and conducts resupply and intense training activities during staff turnover between each period.

“If all goes to plan, we will send Phase I out on Saturday and Russ (Howes, CPS’ Greenland maintenance manager) and I out on Sunday.” wrote Tracy. Good luck to the incoming Phase II team, and thanks and warm wishes–literally–to the outgoing Phase I team.–Kip Rithner

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Comments (0) Nov 01 2011

Posted: under Arctic, CH2M HILL Polar Services, Greenland, Polar Field Services.
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Summit Station Photos Spark Halo Discourse

In an image taken with a 360-degree-view fisheye lens, Ed Stockard stands observing a full-sky show, a circular halo called a parhelic circle along with 22 degree and 46 degree halos. Also present: a circumzenithal arc, an upper tangent arc, and a faint Parry arc. Visit http://www.atoptics.co.uk/halosim.htm and view the frequent and infrequent links on the left. Can you find them all? Photo: Ed Stockard

Marko Riikonen visited South Pole in 1998-1999 to film and study the optical effects of ice crystals in the atmosphere, which manifest visibly as halos across the sky. He was part of a team on an NSF grant led by Walter Tape, a mathematics professor from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks. On January 11th, 1999, the team hit the optical jackpot. An exceptionally bright halo display, which included several frequent and rare halos, appeared in the sky. Marko recalled that it lasted almost an hour—an unusually long time for such a magnificent display—and a good number of station folks came out to watch it. He termed the display an “exhausting experience.”

Riikonen had had his share of discovery prior to his trip to the South Pole; in Chile he witnessed the so-called Lascar display which had at least five new halos, and is still unexplained. Says Marko, “We tried to explain it with cubic ice, but that’s not the answer.”

Meanwhile, in 1999, a few months after Riikonen left South Pole, I found myself heading to Summit Station, Greenland, for the first time. In mid-March four of us went to open the research site after a winter hiatus.  Although I had seen some polar halos in Antarctica, I was totally unprepared for what I saw one day while grooming the skiway.

From Oct 15th 2001: Skiway flags salute a nice 22 deg halo with a sunvex parry on top. The wider “v” below is the upper tangent arc. Completing the photo is the partial parhelic circle and associated parhelion or sun dogs. A very faint helic arc is visible to the right. Photo: Ed Stockard

Looking out from the Tucker I saw two halos around the sun and a variety of arcs that I had not a clue about. I stopped the machine and got out. Looking around I could see what I know now is called a parhelic circle encompassing the sky. Literally, turning around in 360 degrees I could see this halo. I started talking to myself. I said words I can’t repeat in this article!

I climbed back in the Tucker but could only drive a short distance before I had to stop, get out and repeat to myself the words of absolute amazement. I didn’t know at the time how the arcs and halos formed. I don’t remember all of the individual sights I saw but that day stuck in my mind.

Fast forward, this time 12 years, to 2011 and I am now spending August to November for the second consecutive year here at Summit. I have spent quite a few years working for PFS/CPS in Kangerlussuaq, which is the logistics hub for the U.S. National Science Foundation’s research program in Greenland. I’ve been a frequent contributor to this blog from my photographic work there. Kanger, as we call it, has remarkable auroras but I’ve rarely seen halos in Kanger like those on top of the ice sheet at Summit.

A typical but beautiful 22 deg halo marks the first phase of 2011-2012 winter operations at Summit Station. Photo: Ed Stockard

A 22 deg halo with faint parahelion or sun dogs. Marko suggested I use a sun blocker, which I made from the lid of a 5-gallon bucket on a 12-ft piece of old bamboo. The blocker keeps the photos from washing out and being over-exposed. Photo: Ed Stockard

Marko Riikonen found my photos in 2010, after they showed up on Atoptics.co.uk and on my flickr.com site. He picked one to include in his new book on halos. He has mentored me in optical photography through this current phase here at Summit, often emailing with obvious enthusiasm. It has been a delight and inspiration having his insight and tips on photographs, as well as his explanations of the phenomena I’m witnessing and documenting.

Halos and arcs can be seen worldwide, but the varied and rare phenomena mostly occur at the higher latitudes.  In some remote places in the Arctic and Antarctic, scientists have to rely on the eyes (and cameras) of others. My work here at Summit Station during the early arctic winter has allowed me a unique vantage point to photograph atmospheric optics in detail, for enthusiasts and scientists such as Riikonen to gather more knowledge about them.

Halos can occur by moonlight too. Here, a fairly complex 2010 lunar halo display. Present and easily visible are the 22 deg halo, parahelic circle, parahelion or moon dogs in this case, the upper tangent arc and parry arc along with a lower tangent arc on the horizon. Photo: Ed Stockard

As this correspondence has developed Riikonens’ comments have introduced me to a new vocabulary: Wegener, Schulthess and Kern arcs; Tape infralateral arcs; and all kinds of halos. Riikonen says, “When the temps fall below -30 C, you probably will get some odd radius displays, like last year.” He also says my photos have advanced the field a bit: “The Greenland ice cap halo skies have been a question mark until your photos started coming along. You have already written you name in the halo history.”

Cool.

Riikonen himself is well embedded in halo history, living in Finland in an area that often sees halos. On the night of December 7 /8 2008 in Rovaniemi, Finland, five new halos were revealed. “It was a great night. The display was created with [a] spotlight in diamond dust. The diamond dust was so thick that the moon did not shine through, so the only possibility to see halos was to use the spotlight. The cystals were huge. You could look at them with [the] naked eye. I had never seen a high-quality diamond dust like that.”

Riikonen’s travels in search of halos have taken him to Resolute Bay in Canada and “the pole of cold” in Oymyakon, Siberia.  At Oymyakon, in 1997, the optics were found to be rather typical. In his words, “We went to look for halos in the extremely low temps. Well, they were nothing special. When it gets too cold, it is mostly just 22 halo.”

I asked Marko about climate change and the effects it may have on these optical elights. He answered, “The high cloud halos in Finland have gotten markedly poorer soon after we entered new millenium. We used to have a so-called ‘halo spring’ in April-May during which numerous good, high-cloud displays were observed, but now there has been no halo spring for almost a decade. The Finns have been observing halos since the beginning of [the] 1980′s, so it is three decades of data now. That is of course way too small of a sample to say that climate change is responsible for the better quality high-cloud displays famine. Maybe the first two decades were exceptionally high-quality and now we are back to normal. Or maybe that was the norm and due to the climate change high-cloud halos have become poor.”

The above links and the halos mentioned are only a partial list of what Riikonen has seen. Marko hopes others will also photograph the world’s wonderful sky and provide shots of little-seen and possibly never-photographed optics. To all in the Arctic, Antarctic and around the globe:  Keep the camera ready. . . Jot down a few facts with the photos—temperature, clouds and winds may help.  Share in Marko’s enthusiasm and put forth some good data with remarkable photos. You might even hit that optical jackpot.—Ed Stockard

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Comments (0) Sep 29 2011

Posted: under Arctic, Greenland, Meteorology & Climate, Polar Field Services.
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Glory, Halo-luia

Summit Station Images Featured on Atmospheric Optics

Greenland Glory. Photo: Ed Stockard

The above photo, and the one just below, have been featured recently as the Optics Photo of the Day on the Atmospheric Optics website (http://www.atoptics.co.uk/). Ed Stockard shot both images at Summit Station on Greenland’s ice sheet, where he is working this fall.

The Atmospheric Optics website is devoted to explaining and exploring the visual results of light playing on particles in the air–ash, dust, and in Ed’s case, ice. The rainbow-colored rings encircling the building form a “glory,” explains website curator Les Crowley, the result of “sunlight diffracted almost directly back along its path by very small fog droplets.” Click the picture for a better view. Glory indeed.

Visit the Atmospheric Optics website to learn more about optical effects in the atmosphere, and to find out when, how, and where you might be able to see some in person.

A short description of the science behind the optical effect accompanies each image. You may also visit Ed Stockard’s flickr page, which he is updating with more lovely images from Summit (http://www.flickr.com/photos/coastaleddy/ ).–Kip Rithner

Greenland Halos. Photo: Ed Stockard

 

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Comments (0) Sep 12 2011

Posted: under Arctic, CH2M HILL Polar Services, Greenland, Meteorology & Climate, Outreach & Education.
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At Summit Station, the End is Near

The end of the fall phase-in to winter darkness, that is.

Summiteers Ed Stockard (manager), Will Beyer (mechanic), Adam Maerz (NOAA science technician), Katrine Gorham (PFS science technician), and Matt Okraszewski (ICECAPS science technician) pose on the steps of the mobile science facility, which houses the ICECAPS project. Photo: Ed Stockard

The team of five that’s been easing the research facility on Greenland’s icy plateau into winter since station closing in mid-August is now beginning to think about leaving. Leaving the nearly 30 experiments they’re monitoring and maintaining for the GeoSummit Observatory, NOAA, the University of Idaho and others; leaving the growing line of summer machinery and equipment tucked into a deepening blanket of snow on the winter storage berm; leaving the inventory and mechanical projects on a long tasking list, and the daily effort to make water and keep the lights on; leaving the growing darkness and cold, the isolation from family, and from other touchstones of their lives back in the world.

But they’re also leaving what has obviously been a jovial three months up at Summit Station, which the U.S. National Science Foundation operates in cooperation with the government of Greenland. Ed mentioned recently that the gang has taken every meal together—a sure sign of harmony up there where all work and no play can make Jack a dull boy. Katrine Gorham remarked today that the time has flown, and the team is now beginning to worry about getting everything done prior to the scheduled 29 October, Twin-Otter-delivered influx of people, freshies and materials for the dark phase of winter.

Makin' bacon: Matt Okraszewski makes Sunday morning breakfast. Photo: Ed Stockard

A recent storm with winds close to 40 knots left a fresh layer of snow around station buildings, triggering another round of Sisyphusian shoveling, but what’s new—don’t visit Summit if you don’t like to shovel snow, we like to say. Katrine was pleased to mention that the team had launched the twice daily radiosonde balloons for the ICECAPS project (Von Walden’s cloud microphysics project) in winds of up to 25 knots. (These helium-filled balloons carry instrument payloads that radio back information on the clouds over Summit, helping to validate data gathered by the ICECAPS instruments on the ground).

"October 13th," Ed writes. "After a windy spell you can see we have made tracks here and there. Adam and Katrine did the snowmobile rounds for IceSat. Will brought water to Big House. We shoveled and cleared snow. It's all good!" Photo: Ed Stockard

–Kip Rithner

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Comments (0) Oct 14 2010

Posted: under Arctic, CH2M HILL Polar Services, Greenland, National Science Foundation, Polar Field Services, Polar Field Services.
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Notes From Summit Station

Katrine Gorham, the Polar Field Services science project manager at Greenland’s Summit Station, has been keeping busy participating in PolarTREC’s Polar Connect, helping wrap up the summer field season and usher in the fall crew, and documenting the experience. Recently she sent some images our way.

Phase I and Summer Science Techs: Adam Maerz, Matt Okraszewski, Katrine Gorham, Brad Halter, Elizabeth Morton, and Andy Clarke (left to right). The three on the left are the incoming phase I techs and the three on the right are the outgoing summer techs. This was taken right before the last Herc out of Summit for 2010. All photos: Katrine Gorham

The Summit population is five folks now, all of whom are settling into a routine, reports Ed Stockard, Summit Station Manager. Last week temperatures ranged between -7C and -30C, with winds from the NE averaging about 10 knots. Reports Ed: “Much of the week seemed unusually warm for this time of year.”

Matt Okraszewski peeks out of a drill site about three miles from Summit camp. The crew was digging pits in search of a buried borehole casing.

Katrine Gorham, Elizabeth Morton, and Adam Maerz (front to back) collect surface snow samples for researchers at the Desert Research Institute.

The Summit crew has daily tasks that include keeping the year-round science experiments and the station infrastructure running, making water, conducting work and safety meetings, recording weather, maintaining equipment, and more.

Adam Maerz brushes snow off of one of the Swiss solar instruments.

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Comments (0) Sep 03 2010

Posted: under Greenland, Meteorology & Climate, National Science Foundation, Polar Field Services.
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Home Sweet Summit

Summer’s science and construction efforts complete, a small crew settles in to caretaker mode up on the world’s roof
Summit Station's Big House. Photo: Bill McCormick

Summit Station's Big House. Photo: Bill McCormick

By the time the last of the Air National Guard’s LC-130s glides down the long skiway at Summit Station and climbs into the sky, signaling the end of the summer season, the tiny group left behind must feel some relief. They’ve spent several weeks accumulating tasking from a multitude of colleagues while assisting with end-of-season resupply and close-out activities—the usual August bustle and hum.

As they wave that last plane off, the CPS crew turns to a station suddenly transformed from a summer camp into their winter home. With no planes in or out for several months, the five will have the place to themselves as the sun spends more and more time below the horizon (and the mercury* drops as well). They will focus on buttoning the place down for the dark season, conducting maintenance on well-used equipment and gear before putting it to bed on the cargo berm or in the storage warehouse, sorting inventory, and closing summer buildings. At the same time, two technical staff will monitor, troubleshoot, maintain and report on a host of year-round experiments for scientists “back in the world.”
SummitPhaseI

Party of five? Summit’s phase one winter crew arrives at the station. Pictured: Brad Whelchel, Sandra Liu (black hat barely visible between Brad and Andy), Andy Clarke, Katie Koster. Not pictured: Johan Booth.

Prior to closing, the crew at Summit wrapped up an ambitious construction season: they relocated the Green House and berthing module, installed a new, insulated garage with new mechanical systems and floor, upgraded electric voltage from 208 to 480 and installed a new fuel tank in the shop.

The structural relocation and upgrades are part of an integrated, large-scope project that aims to make Summit Station more efficient to both maintain and for conducting research, said Jay Burnside, construction manager for Polar Field Services (part of the CPS team).

The new garage is large enough to provide a scientific balloon-launching facility and space for other science activities, accommodate the largest heavy equipment, house the power plant, and provide adequate storage.  It will also serve as Summit Station’s central power production and maintenance area.

Burnside raved about the crew’s hard work and said the construction caused “no unexpected conflict.”

“In general, having people up there working construction is an innate conflict with the science work,” he said. “But we worked closely with the scientists to minimize the impact.”

Summit Station: new and improved. Photo Jay Burnside

The new and improved Summit Station. The new garage stands behind the Green House/Berthing module, left center, where the winter staff will sleep. The old garage is at center right. Photo: Jay Burnside

*Mercury freezes at about -40 degrees, at which point we have to measure the cold via alcohol, platinum resistor, or other solid-state thermometers. Clearly at that point we know it’s cold.

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Comments (0) Aug 26 2009

Posted: under CH2M HILL Polar Services, Greenland.
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