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The singing firn

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 June 2023

Julien Chaput*
Affiliation:
Department of Earth Environmental and Resource Sciences, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX, USA
Richard C. Aster
Affiliation:
Department of Geosciences and Warner College of Natural Resources, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA
Marianne Karplus
Affiliation:
Department of Earth Environmental and Resource Sciences, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX, USA
*
Corresponding author: Julien Chaput; Email: jachaput@utep.edu
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Abstract

Antarctic firn presents an exotic seismological environment in which the behaviors of propagating waves can be significantly at odds with those in other Earth media. We present a condensed view of the nascent field of ambient noise seismology in Antarctic firn-covered media, and highlight multiple unusual and information-rich observations framed through the lens of the firn's important role as a buffer for air temperature anomalies and a complex contributor to ice mass balance. We summarize key results from several recent papers depicting novel wind-excited firn resonances and point to the plethora of ways these observations could facilitate imaging and monitoring of glacial systems at single, isolated seismometers. Finally, we propose significant instrumental and computational objectives necessary to constrain resonance excitation mechanisms and broadly apply these observations as useful monitoring tools in Antarctica.

Information

Type
Letter
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The International Glaciological Society
Figure 0

Figure 1. (A) Example of firn resonances from nearly two years of North component ambient seismic data recorded at station DR09 on Roosevelt Island from Ross Ice Shelf broadband array (red circle, inset map) displayed as a time/frequency plot (spectrogram) (Chaput and others, 2018). Red boxes indicate seasonal open sea ice conditions, and corresponding spectral effects are not observed at grounded sites. Stable shelf plate modes are visible as high amplitude temporally stable vertical bands below 5 Hz (notably during open sea ice conditions, red boxes), and temporally variable firn modes above roughly 5 Hz (observable year round). (B) Description of environmental effects that dictate the behavior of firn resonances. (1) Wind coupling with semi-periodic surface snowforms and the low-velocity/density firn structure excites unique firn mode patterns. (2) Firn is sensitive to anomalous near-zero surface temperatures, and the frequency range over which resonances are altered depends on the depth penetration of the temperature anomaly. (3) Firn accommodates strain associated with flowing ice masses in a ductile fashion at shallow depths where porosity is high, and in a brittle fashion where pores have largely closed.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Examples of firn resonances show in ‘peak tracked’ form, where only peak maximums for both horizontal components of the spectrogram at each time bin are shown. (A) Firn resonance response to alterations in surface snowforms. Strong storm activity (arrows in left panel, matched with periods of high winds shown by the black trace), can deposit new snowforms that are then slowly eroded during periods of quiescence (right panel), resulting in slow spectral decay (time scale of months, black dotted boxes). (B) Peak tracked firn resonances at 5 stations on RIS during a shelf-wide near-zero temperature event in 2016 (bottom left panel, Nicolas and others (2017)). Firn undergoes up to a 40% reduction in elastic moduli (top right panel) as bonds between snow grains weaken, resulting in a downward drift in frequency for higher peaks and a reduction in amplitude (bottom right panel). (C) Peak tracked spectrogram at RIS station RS17 for 10 days during 2016, showing the obvious offset in frequency (also frequency dependent) between North and East components. Right panel: Shallow firn deforms plastically under extensional strain typical of RIS and features a strain-elongated pore space (black arrows aligned with ice flow), while deeper firn to solid ice responds in a brittle manner, often resulting in flow-perpendicular crevassing (red arrows) unless dominant crevassing is advected and rotated from past strain regimes.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Multi-faceted seismic and distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) experiment coupled with drone-based photogrammetry aiming to make key firn seismic and environmental measurements to advance understanding of the firn medium and environmental forcing effects that govern resonance peak and other seismological observations, leveraging a long-running UW-Madison (UWM) autonomous weather or similar station (e.g. Lazzara and others, 2012).