Abstract

Sunlight reflected off the surface of the moon provides sufficient illumination for nighttime imaging of the earth from those spacecraft on which the instruments are sensitive to low light levels. The Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) series of satellites are at present the only systems capable of furnishing visible nocturnal images of the earth from space. Features having a high albedo in the visible wavelengths, such as snow and ice, can easily be identified on moonlit nights when the moon is in the gibbous or full phases. Little information exists about the distribution of leads, fractures, and polynya on a basin-wide scale in the winter pack ice, and knowledge of oceanic and atmospheric fluxes is hindered by the limited data available in winter. The DMSP data is a relatively untapped source for observing polar regions during the winter. Using nighttime imagery is a novel way to explore polar areas during the winter months when the sun is below the horizon for much of the time.

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