Malayali researcher to join Arctic expedition team

This September, when the winters begin, the research icebreaker 'Polarstern' will set sail from Norway towards the North Pole, and intentionally get stuck in the ice of the Central Arctic.

Published: 16th February 2019 02:07 AM  |   Last Updated: 12th March 2019 02:20 PM   |  A+A-

Vishnu during a previous expedition in the Artic

Express News Service

KOCHI: This September, when the winters begin, the research icebreaker 'Polarstern' will set sail from Norway towards the North Pole, and intentionally get stuck in the ice of the Central Arctic. For one whole year, it will glide across the Arctic Ocean, the longest expedition ever to be undertaken in the Arctic. The Polarstern will have 600 researchers from 17 countries, collecting field data to learn more about the Arctic. And on board will be Vishnu Nandan, a polar researcher, the only Indian till date.

The mammoth expedition will have researchers working on various aspects of the Arctic and is expected to provide us a better understanding of the climatic system in the Arctic. “This will help us get more answers on what is happening and also with the mid-latitudes, on how the Arctic is actually influencing the global climatic conditions. It is a data for generations to come in,” says Vishnu, who is part of the seven-member team which will work on providing accurate estimates of sea ice thickness.

“The last such expedition was SHEBA, and it was in the 1970s. It has been over forty years and we are still using that data. So from that perspective, we will be using the MOSAiC data for the next 50 to 100 years,” says Vishnu. “It will also help us determine how the ice changes in one year. We are using multiple radar frequencies and this will help in getting better estimates of sea ice thickness,” says Vishnu, whose study report on the Arctic sea ice provided a crucial turning point in the estimation of sea ice thickness in the Arctic. 

For someone who has undertaken 16 expeditions to the Polar regions, Vishnu is able to decipher the changes in Arctic due to global warming. “There is substantial warming even during the winters and it is severely affecting the mid-latitudes,” he says. “The sea ice thickness is also showing a downward trend. Over the next fifty years, we will witness a sea ice-free Arctic during the summers,” he adds.