Introduction to the Physics of the Cryosphere

Introduction to the Physics of the Cryosphere

by Melody Sandells
Introduction to the Physics of the Cryosphere

Introduction to the Physics of the Cryosphere

by Melody Sandells

Hardcover

$120.00 
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Overview

This second edition defines different parts of the cryosphere including: permafrost, snow, land ice, sea ice, ocean, atmosphere and covers numerical modelling of thermodynamic exchanges: conservation of mass, energy, and momentum. It explores the physical basis behind phenomena such as formation of stone circles from melt-freeze processes, snow crystal formation and pressure-melting of glaciers. As an engaging course text for students, it discusses the contribution of melt to sea level rise and explains terms used commonly in the literature.

This book is intended for graduates with a numerical sciences background, particularly those who are heading towards postgraduate study or are generally interested in environmental physics.

Key Features

  • Explains basic physics underpinning research topics

  • Provides broad understanding of the fundamental cryospheric components

  • Demonstrates how remote sensing measurements are interpreted and used to monitor the cryosphere

  • Describes the importance of the cryosphere within the global ocean and its relationship with the climate

  • Explains observed phenomena supported by many photos, illustrations, links to other reading material and videos


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781643278292
Publisher: Morgan and Claypool Publishers
Publication date: 11/01/2014
Series: Iop Concise Physics: A Morgan & Claypool Publication
Pages: 88
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 0.00(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

Melody Sandells studied Physics (MSci) at Imperial College, London before undertaking her PhD at the University of Reading on Modelling the Impact of Vegetation on the Seasonal Snowcover, which involved a four month field experiment in the Owyhee Mountains of Idaho. She moved on to study the densification of snow at the Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling in University College London. Later, she returned to the University of Reading as a member of the European Space Agency Expert Scientific Laboratory for the SMOS mission. Since then, Mel has dedicated her research to understanding how to improve global observations of snow mass, visiting the Canadian sub-Arctic, and Nordic Arctic along the way.

Daniela Flocco studied Environmental Sciences, majoring in oceanography at the “Universita’ Parthenope” in Naples, Italy. She earned her PhD with a thesis on the geophysics of Antarctic coastal polynyas and their impact on dense water production based on her studies at the Scott Polar Research Institute and the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at the University of Cambridge.
Since then she has been working at University College London on the thermodynamics of sea ice focusing on the role of melt ponds on the enhanced thinning rate of Arctic sea ice. She has worked on the inclusion of the physics of melt ponds in one of the sea ice models used within the IPCC.
She is now working as a research assistant in the Meteorology Department at the University of Reading.
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