globalchange  > 全球变化的国际研究计划
项目编号: 1443448
项目名称:
Collaborative Research: A High-sensitivity Beryllium-10 Record from an Ice Core at South Pole
作者: Joerg Schaefer
承担单位: Columbia University
批准年: 2016
开始日期: 2016-05-01
结束日期: 2019-04-30
资助金额: 699932
资助来源: US-NSF
项目类别: Continuing grant
国家: US
语种: 英语
特色学科分类: Geosciences - Polar
英文关键词: 10be ; atmosphere ; south pole ; record ; year ; measurement ; solar activity ; cosmic ray ; climate model ; antarctica ; ice core ; climate variability ; beryllium-10 ; concentration ; transport ; earth ; maunder minimum ; element beryllium ; magnetic field ; earth?s climate ; 10be deposition ; modern instrumental record ; production ; 10be datum ; late 17th century ; distant past ; available location ; 10be production ; solar variability ; time-series record ; variable atmospheric circulation ; last glacial maximum ; novel datum ; production rate ; atmospheric 10be production ; millennial scale ; annual resolution ; past change ; high latitudes ; snow surface ; last glacial cold period ; ice surface ; atmospheric circulation ; 10be concentration measurement
英文摘要: This project will acquire measurements of the concentration of beryllium-10 (10Be) from an ice core from the South Pole, Antarctica. An isotope of the element beryllium, 10Be, is produced in the atmosphere by high-energy protons (cosmic rays) that enter Earth's atmosphere from space. It is removed from the atmosphere by settling or by scavenging by rain or snowfall. Hence, concentrations of 10Be in snow at the South Pole reflect the production rate of 10Be in the atmosphere. Because the rate of production of 10Be over Antarctica depends primarily on the strength of the Sun's magnetic field, measurements of 10Be in the South Pole ice core will provide a record of changes in solar activity. The South Pole ice core will reach an age of 40,000 years at the bottom. The project will result in measurements of 10Be at annual resolution for the last 100 years and selected periods in the more distant past, such as the Maunder Minimum, a period during the late 17th century during which no sunspots were observed, or the last glacial cold period, about 20,000 years ago. A climate model that can simulate the production of 10Be in the atmosphere, it's transport through the atmosphere, and its deposition at the snow surface in Antarctica will be used to aid in using the 10Be data to determine past changes in solar activity from decadal to millennial scale, and in turn to evaluate the role of the Sun in Earth?s climate from a new perspective.

The production of 10Be in Earth's atmosphere results from the spallation of oxygen and nitrogen in the atmosphere by cosmic rays. Cosmic ray variations in the high latitudes are primarily modulated by solar variability. Time-series records of 10Be from ice cores are therefore important for deriving variations in solar activity through time, which is fundamental to understanding climate variability. Deposition of 10Be to the ice surface is also influenced by variability in atmospheric circulation and deposition processes, and South Pole is the best available location for minimizing the influence of variable atmospheric circulation on 10Be deposition. To date, only one record of 10Be exists from South Pole; that record is widely used in solar forcing estimates used in climate models, but covers only the last millennium and ends in CE 1982. We will obtain 10Be concentration measurements in a 1500-m, 40000-year long ice core from the South Pole. This will extend the existing record both further back in time and forward to the present, providing overlap with the modern instrumental record of solar and climate variability. High resolution (annual to biannual) measurements will be made in targeted areas of interest, including the last 100 years, the Maunder Minimum (CE 1650-1715), and the last glacial maximum. The novel data will be used in conjunction with climate model experiments that incorporate 10Be production, transport, and deposition physics. Together, data and modeling will create an updated record of atmospheric 10Be production and hence of solar activity.
资源类型: 项目
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/92410
Appears in Collections:全球变化的国际研究计划
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Recommended Citation:
Joerg Schaefer. Collaborative Research: A High-sensitivity Beryllium-10 Record from an Ice Core at South Pole. 2016-01-01.
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