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Dive into the research topics where Erica L. Key is active.

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Featured researches published by Erica L. Key.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2009

Cirene: Air—Sea Interactions in the Seychelles—Chagos Thermocline Ridge Region

Jérôme Vialard; J. P. Duvel; Michael J. McPhaden; Pascale Bouruet-Aubertot; Brian Ward; Erica L. Key; D. Bourras; Robert A. Weller; Peter J. Minnett; A. Weill; Christophe Cassou; L. Eymard; Claude Basdevant; Yves Dandonneau; O. Duteil; Takeshi Izumo; C. de Boyer Montégut; Sébastien Masson; F. Marsac; Christophe Menkes; S. Kennan

The Vasco-Cirene program explores how strong air-sea interactions promoted by the shallow thermocline and high sea surface temperature in the Seychelles-Chagos thermocline ridge results in marked variability at synoptic, intraseasonal, and interannual time scales. The Cirene oceanographic cruise collected oceanic, atmospheric, and air-sea flux observations in this region in January–February 2007. The contemporaneous Vasco field experiment complemented these measurements with balloon deployments from the Seychelles. Cirene also contributed to the development of the Indian Ocean observing system via deployment of a mooring and 12 Argo profilers. Unusual conditions prevailed in the Indian Ocean during January and February 2007, following the Indian Ocean dipole climate anomaly of late 2006. Cirene measurements show that the Seychelles-Chagos thermocline ridge had higher-than-usual heat content with subsurface anomalies up to 7°C. The ocean surface was warmer and fresher than average, and unusual eastward cur...


Journal of Physical Oceanography | 2009

Why Were Sea Surface Temperatures so Different in the Eastern Equatorial Atlantic in June 2005 and 2006

Frédéric Marin; Guy Caniaux; Bernard Bourlès; Hervé Giordani; Yves Gouriou; Erica L. Key

Abstract A comparison of June 2005 and June 2006 sea surface temperatures in the eastern equatorial Atlantic exhibits large variability in the properties of the equatorial cold tongue, with far colder temperatures in 2005 than in 2006. This difference is found to result mainly from a time shift in the development of the cold tongue between the two years. Easterlies were observed to be stronger in the western tropical Atlantic in April–May 2005 than in April–May 2006, and these winds favorably preconditioned oceanic subsurface conditions in the eastern Atlantic. However, it is also shown that a stronger than usual intraseasonal intensification of the southeastern trades was responsible for the rapid and early intense cooling of the sea surface temperatures in mid-May 2005 over a broad region extending from 20°W to the African coast and from 6°S to the equator. This particular event underscores the ability of local intraseasonal wind stress variability in the Gulf of Guinea to initiate the cold tongue seaso...


Annals of Glaciology | 2006

ARISE (Antarctic Remote Ice Sensing Experiment) in the East 2003: Validation of Satellite-derived Sea-ice Data Product

Ra Massom; Ap Worby; Vi Lytle; Thorsten Markus; Ian Allison; Theodore A. Scambos; Hiroyuki Enomoto; Kazutaka Tateyama; Terence Haran; Josefino C. Comiso; Andreas Pfaffling; Takeshi Tamura; Atsuhiro Muto; Pannir Kanagaratnam; Barry Giles; Nw Young; Glenn Hyland; Erica L. Key

Abstract Preliminary results are presented from the first validation of geophysical data products (ice concentration, Snow thickness on Sea ice (hs) and ice temperature (TI) from the NASA EOS Aqua AMSR-E Sensor, in East Antarctica (in September–October 2003). The challenge of collecting Sufficient measurements with which to validate the coarse-resolution AMSR-E data products adequately was addressed by means of a hierarchical approach, using detailed in situ measurements, digital aerial photography and other Satellite data. Initial results from a circumnavigation of the experimental Site indicate that, at least under cold conditions with a dry Snow cover, there is a reasonably close agreement between Satellite- and aerial-photo-derived ice concentrations, i.e. 97.2±3.6% for NT2 and 96.5±2.5% for BBA algorithms vs 94.3% for the aerial photos. In general, the AMSR-E concentration represents a Slight overestimate of the actual concentration, with the largest discrepancies occurring in regions containing a relatively high proportion of thin ice. The AMSR-E concentrations from the NT2 and BBA algorithms are Similar on average, although differences of up to 5% occur in places, again related to thin-ice distribution. The AMSR-E ice temperature (TI) product agrees with coincident Surface measurements to approximately 0.5˚C in the limited dataset analyzed. Regarding Snow thickness, the AMSR hs retrieval is a Significant underestimate compared to in situ measurements weighted by the percentage of thin ice (and open water) present. For the case Study analyzed, the underestimate was 46% for the overall average, but 23% compared to Smooth-ice measurements. The Spatial distribution of the AMSR-E hs product follows an expected and consistent Spatial pattern, Suggesting that the observed difference may be an offset (at least under freezing conditions). Areas of discrepancy are identified, and the need for future work using the more extensive dataset is highlighted.


Atmosphere-ocean | 2004

Are polynyas self‐sustaining?

R.F. Marsden; J. Serdula; Erica L. Key; Peter J. Minnett

Abstract In this paper, 441 Conductivity Temperature Depth (CTD) casts from the North Water (NOW) Polynya study were used to calculate geostrophic currents between the 10 and 200 dbar surface during April, May and June 1998. Results for April and May indicated a surface intensified southward flow of 10 to 15 cm s–1 with a small return flow along the Greenland coast in agreement with inferred currents described by Melling et al. (2001) and surface ice drifts found by Wilson et al. (2001). Southward transports at this time were 0.4–0.55 Sv in April and May. In June, however, surface currents diminished markedly: southward transports declined to 0.1–0.35 Sv, coincident with a decrease in directly measured winds over the polynya and in the surface barometric pressure difference between Grise Fjord and the Carey Islands that was used as a surrogate for the local north wind speed. There was no evident decrease in air pressure difference between Resolute and Grise Fjord, indicative of the strength of the north wind over the eastern Arctic in general. The results are consistent with present thinking that the NOW Polynya is primarily a latent heat polynya, forced by dominant north winds. The idea, broached here, is that the polynya creates its own microclimate which sustains the polynyas ice‐free condition after its initial formation. The mechanism is identified by an anomalous low pressure region associated with surface buoyancy flux in the polynya and is pursued through the application of a simple geostrophic adjustment model that suggests two self‐sustaining mechanisms. Firstly, the frontal intrusion of the cold ambient terrestrial air mass drives a significant surface wind that transports frazil ice to the edge of the polynya before it can congeal. Secondly, rotation at these high latitudes restricts the penetration of the front into the polynya, essentially insulating the centre from freezing temperatures.


Annals of Glaciology | 2006

Implications of shortwave cloud forcing and feedbacks in the Southern Ocean

Erica L. Key; Peter J. Minnett

Abstract Measurements of the incident solar radiation taken during the Antarctic Remote Ice Sensing Experiment (ARISE) aboard the R/V Aurora Australis in the Southern Ocean and springtime Antarctic ice pack are analyzed together with all-sky cloud imagery to determine the incident shortwave cloud radiative forcing at the surface. For most solar zenith angles (Z<82˚) in this dataset, the primary shortwave cloud effect is to induce cooling of the surface; as the sun approaches the horizon, however, the shortwave effects become negligible or even positive. The clear-sky atmospheric transmissivity over the length of the cruise is 0.91, a value comparable to those derived from measurements taken at various locations in the Arctic during daylight periods. Although the presence of clouds has a great effect on the surface heat budget and provides a negative shortwave feedback that may stabilize the polar atmosphere, the effect on the photosynthetically active radiation available to ice algae is relatively small in comparison to the effects of even small amounts of snow on sea ice.


Gayana | 2004

ESTIMATING POLYNYA CLOUDINESS

Erica L. Key; Peter J. Minnett

Global cloudiness distributions, though an important component in radiative and hydrological budgets, are neither adequately known nor easily retrieved by the spatial and spectral resolutions afforded by current satellite instrumentation. At high latitudes, cold, high albedo surfaces present a particular challenge to cloud retrieval, offering little or no thermal or visible contrast for cloud-ice discrimination. It is in these frequently cloudy and climate-sensitive regions that changing cloud amounts and optical parameters enact the greatest influence, enhancing or suppressing melt through cloud base emission of longwave radiation or scattering of incident shortwave radiation. Polynyas and leads, seasonally ice-free areas characterized by intense air-sea fluxes of heat and moisture, are useful features for exploring the relationships between cloud cover and the underlying surface. Using polar-optimized CASPR (Cloud and Surface Parameter Retrieval) algorithms to process multi-channel AVHRR radiances, cloud amounts, microphysics, and surface forcing are evaluated and validated against in situ measurements collected in several polynyas and leads across the Western Arctic during the years 1992-2000


La Météorologie [ISSN 0026-1181], 2012, Série 8, N° Special AMMA ; p. 17-24 | 2012

Les avancées d'AMMA sur les interactions océan-atmosphère

Guy Caniaux; Hervé Giordani; Jean-Luc Redelsperger; Malick Wade; Bernard Bourlès; Denis Bourras; Gaëlle De Coëtlogon; Yves du Penhoat; Serge Janicot; Erica L. Key; Urbain Koffi; Nicolas Kolodziejczyk; Laurence Eymard; Julien Jouanno; Alban Lazar; Marion Leduc-Leballeur; Nathalie Lefèvre; Frédéric Marin; Hanh Nguyen; Gaëlle Parard

The results gathered since the AMMA/EGEE campaigns of 2005-2007 in the field of air-sea interactions are presented. They show the key role of the Atlantic cold tongue (ACT) in the eastern equatorial Atlantic on the West African monsoon. The strengthening of south easterlies, associated with the Saint-Helena anticyclone, promotes the preconditioning of the thermocline along the equator and the development of the ACT.The equatorial front on its northern boundary, modifies the surface heat fluxes that affect the circulation in the lower atmosphere. This circulation helps to push moisture northward, toward the West African sub-continent, and impacts the monsoon jump.


international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2003

Cloud radiative forcing over the Beaufort Sea and north slope of Alaska

Erica L. Key; Peter J. Minnett; Robert H. Evans; Tim Papakyriakou

The north slope of Alaska provides a unique opportunity to observe differences in surface cloud radiative forcing over land, snow, ice, and sea. Data collected during late summer 2000 from the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) site at Barrow are compared with coincident shipboard measurements from the USCGC Polar Star and co-located remotely-sensed data, including MODIS, AVHRR, TOVS, SeaWiFS, and SSM/I. This combined data set is then used to evaluate the accuracy of several downwelling radiative parameterizations and test the sensitivity of radiative transfer models to changes in surface type, aerosol loading, cloud layering, and cloud microphysics. Further comparison with the SHEBA (Surface Heat Budget of the Arctic) data set underlines the considerable seasonal and interannual variability that defines the Alaskan Beaufort Coast.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Spatial and temporal variability of sea ice in the southern Beaufort Sea and Amundsen Gulf: 1980–2004

R. J. Galley; Erica L. Key; David G. Barber; Byong Jun Hwang; Jens K. Ehn


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2000

The fate of upwelled waters in the Great Whirl, August 1995

Gary L. Hitchcock; Erica L. Key; J Masters

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Bernard Bourlès

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Denis Bourras

Aix-Marseille University

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Laurence Eymard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Atsuhiro Muto

Pennsylvania State University

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Josefino C. Comiso

Goddard Space Flight Center

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