ANTARCTICA
HITS COLDEST TEMP EVER RECORDED ON EARTH
A remote region in East Antarctica has
set a new record for the coldest place on Earth, with temperatures dipping to a
bone-chilling minus 93.2 degrees Celsius.
The temperatures in several hollows of a high ridge
in Antarctica on the East Antarctic Plateau can dip below minus 92 degrees
Celsius on a clear winter night.
The new record of minus 136 Fahrenheit (minus 93.2 C) was set on August 10,
2010, NASA said.
That is several degrees colder than the previous low of minus 128.6 F (minus
89.2 C), set in 1983 at the Russian Vostok Research Station in East Antarctica.
Scientists made the discovery while analysing the most detailed global surface
temperature maps to date, developed with data from remote sensing satellites
including the new Landsat 8, a joint project of NASA and the US Geological
Survey (USGS).
Ted Scambos, lead scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center in
Boulder, Colorado, joined a team of researchers who turned to sensitive
satellite instruments that can pick up thermal radiation emitted from Earth's
surface, even in areas lacking much heat.
Using these sensors to scan the East Antarctic Plateau, Scambos detected
extremely cold temperatures on a 997 km stretch of the ridge at high elevations
between Argus and Fuji, and even colder temperatures lower elevations in
pockets off the ridge. Then, with the higher resolution of the Thermal Infrared
Sensor (TIRS) aboard Landsat 8, the research team pinpointed the record-setting
pockets.
Researchers analysed 32 years' worth of data from several satellite
instruments. They found temperatures plummeted to record lows dozens of times
in clusters of pockets near a high ridge between Dome Argus and Dome Fuji, two
summits on the ice sheet known as the East Antarctic Plateau.
The coldest permanently inhabited place on Earth is northeastern Siberia, where
temperatures in the towns of Verkhoyansk and Oimekon dropped to a bone-chilling
90 degrees below zero Fahrenheit (minus 67.8 C) in 1892 and 1933, respectively,
NASA said.
The quest to find out just how cold it can get on Earth - and why - started
when the researchers were studying large snow dunes, sculpted and polished by
the wind, on the East Antarctic Plateau.
When the scientists looked closer, they noticed cracks in the snow surface
between the dunes, possibly created when wintertime temperatures got so low the
top snow layer shrunk. This led scientists to wonder what the temperature range
was, and prompted them to hunt for the coldest places using data from two types
of satellite sensors.
The findings were presented at the American Geophysical Union meeting in San
Francisco.
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