This code base is a work in progress. You've found our outdated version 1; this version no longer has a functional Jupyter Book. Our current, updated code base (version 2) is available in this GitHub repository and as a Jupyter Book at this link
NASA's Ice, Cloud, and Land Elevation Satellite-2 (ICESat-2) is a new satellite laser altimetry mission providing high resolution elevation profiling of the entire Earth's surface, particularly in the fast-changing Polar Regions. The ICESat-2 Project Office has produced and disseminated a number of official datasets including polar (Arctic and Antarctic) sea ice freeboard, the extension of sea ice above the local sea surface, in the official ATL10 product (https://nsidc.org/data/ATL10). Using assumptions regarding the snow depth and density on top of the ice, along with the density of the sea ice itself, freeboard measurements can be converted to estimates of sea ice thickness. Sea ice thickness estimates produced using snow loading from the NASA Eulerian Snow on Sea Ice Model (NESOSIM, https://github.com/akpetty/NESOSIM) have been made produced and available through the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) (https://nsidc.org/data/IS2SITMOGR4). More information about the methodology behind this dataset can be found in the original paper (http://www.alekpetty.com/papers/petty2020). A new manuscript is in preparation describing the data presented in this book.
Since its launch in 2018, ICESat-2 has collected and released data over three (at the time of writing) winter seasons across the entire Arctic Ocean, which we describe and analyze within this Jupyter Book.
For more information on ICESat-2, see the project homepage: https://icesat-2.gsfc.nasa.gov/.
Nicole Keeney (Primary author)
[email protected]
GitHub: nicolejkeeney
Alek Petty (Supervisor, ICESat-2 sea ice data lead)
[email protected]
GitHub: akpetty
Jupyter Books provide a novel means of compiling Jupyter Notebooks into one convenient and well-indexed location. Here, jupyter notebooks are used to provide a visual demonstration of our efforts to analyze the monthly gridded ICESat-2 winter Arctic sea ice data (freeboard and thickness), along with other relevant datasets to help us understand recent winter Arctic sea ice growth.
We've also set up the book so that users can easily run the code without needing to download anything by using a hosting service called Binder. To run a notebook (chapter pages in the book) in Binder, just click the Binder tab under the rocket ship icon at the top of each notebook. This option is configured for all notebooks except the modules in the Helper Functions section and the data wrangling notebook.
The gridded ICESat-2 winter Arctic sea ice thickness data is available at the NSIDC (https://nsidc.org/data/IS2SITMOGR4), however to simply our analysis we have also uploaded these same data to a google cloud storage bucket. We have also generated and uploaded a single netcdf file containing all the data presented in this Jupyter Book in the same bucket under the name icesat2-book-data.nc
. This datasets contains all the gridded ICESat-2 sea ice thickness data along with all other datasets used in the notebook to help contextualize the sea ice and atmospheric conditions through each winter. All datasets included have been regridded to the same NSIDC North Polar Sterographic grid (the native grid of the ICESat-2 sea ice data used), to simplify the mapping and comparisons. See the data wrangling page for more information each dataset and on on the regridding process.
If you find any typos or errors in the code or have any suggestions for the book, feel free to open an issue, which you can find by mousing over the GitHub icon at the top of each page. If you are familiar with GitHub, you can also fork the book's repository and suggest an edit that way.
- 9/4/2020: Version 1
- 11/18/2020: Updated with version 2 ICESat-2 data product for AGU Fall 2020 poster highlighting the book.
- 6/14/2021: Transitioned from Google Colab interactivity to Binder.
- 10/25/2021: Added interactive plotting using hvplot. Improved interpolation/smoothing method for ICESat-2 data and added notebook to demonstrate steps.
- 01/24/2022: Updated notebooks to reflect new data variables in ICESat-2 data v2. Added drift vectors.
All of the notebooks in this notebook utilize xarray, a python package built for working with multi-dimensional data like the monthly gridded sea ice data. Xarray is especially useful for time series data and allows for easily plotting data on map projections via compatability with the python packages cartopy and hvplot.
This book has an associated conda environment stored in the file environment.yml. This file can be downloaded and used to set up the environment on your local computer so that you have all the required dependencies needed to run the notebooks. You'll need anaconda and python installed on your computer first. The environment file is also required by Binder in order to set up the computational environment for running the notebooks in the book interactively.
To create the environment, run the following in the command line:
conda env create -f environment.yml
To activate the environment, run the following in the command line:
conda activate icesat2_book
Simple instructions for how to construct/update this book are pasted below for the author's benefit, but don't go into detail on any of the steps. For a more detailed description on Jupyter Books and how to build one of your own, see their page: https://jupyterbook.org/intro.html.
- Activate virtual environment associated with book
- Update github repository with any changes
- cd out of local book directory into the next highest directory
- Next you'll need to construct the html files that make up the pages in the book. Each notebook will be executed and the outputs will be cached in the build folder. In the commmand line, run:
jb build icesat2-book
- Move back cd local book directory... There must be a way to do this without changing in and out of the book directory, but if there is, it's not very intuitive.
cd icesat2-book
- Next you'll update the github page associated with all the html files. You won't be able to see any of the changes to the webpage hosting the book until you do this. In the command line, run:
ghp-import -n -p -f _build/html