Dome A

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Dome A
Elevation 4,091 m (13,422 ft)
Prominence 1,639 m (5,377 ft)
Listing Ultra
Location
Location Antarctica
Coordinates 80°22′S 77°21′E / 80.367°S 77.35°E / -80.367; 77.35

Dome A or Dome Argus (80°22′S 77°21′E / 80.367°S 77.35°E / -80.367; 77.35Coordinates: 80°22′S 77°21′E / 80.367°S 77.35°E / -80.367; 77.35) is an Antarctican plateau located 1200 kilometres inland. It is thought to be one of the coldest naturally occurring places on Earth, with temperatures believed to get close to −90 °C (−130 °F). It is the highest ice feature in Antarctica, consisting of a dome or eminence 4,093 meters elevation above sea level. It is located near the center of East Antarctica, approximately midway between the head of Lambert Glacier and the South Pole, within the Australian claim.

Contents

[edit] Description

Dome Argus is the summit of the massive East Antarctic Ice Sheet, and is not really a mountain in the conventional sense of the word. However, the East Antarctic Ice Cap is itself considered to be part of the East Antarctica Ranges, and therefore Dome Argus is considered to be the highest point in the East Antarctica Ranges. Dome A is a plain and the elevation visually is not noticeable. Below Dome A underneath at least 2400 meters thickness of ice sheet is the Gamburtsev Mountain Range.

The name "Dome Argus" was given by the Scott Polar Research Institute from Greek mythology; Argus built the ship in which Jason and the Argonauts traveled.

This site is one of the driest locations on Earth and receives 1 – 3 cm of snow per year. Due to this, as well as calm weather, this site is an excellent location to obtain ice core samples for the research of climates in the past.[1] Temperatures at Dome A fall below -80°C almost every winter, while in summer it rarely exceeds -10°C.

[edit] Exploration

Details of the morphology of this feature were determined by the SPRI-NSF-TUD airborne radio echo sounding program between the years 1967 and 1979.

In January 2005 a team from the Chinese National Antarctic Research Expeditions (CHINARE) traversed 1228 km from Zhongshan Station to Dome A and located the highest point of the ice sheet (4093 m above sea level) by GPS survey at 80°22’S 77°21’E on Jan 18. This point is near one end of an elongate ridge (about 60 km long and 10 km wide) which is a major ice divide and has an elevation difference along its length of only a few metres. An automatic weather station (AWS) was deployed at Dome A, and a second station was installed approximately half way between the summit and the coast at a site called Eagle (76°25'S, 77°01'E, 2830 m above sea level). These AWS are operated as part of an ongoing collaboration between China and Australia which also includes a third AWS (LGB69) at 70°50'S, 77°04'E, 1854 m above sea level which has operated since January 2002. Station at Dome A is powered by solar cells and diesel fuel and requires yearly service and refuelling.[1]

The coldest air temperature recorded at Dome A since January 2005 thus far (28 September 2010) was in July 2005: -82.5°C. The lowest air temperature (-89.2°C) at the surface of the earth was recorded in July 1983 at Vostok, which is almost 600 m lower in elevation than Dome A. Analysis of satellite data and atmospheric models shows that the Ridge A which is located 144 km south-east from Dome A is potentially even better location to look for lowest temperatures on Earth.[2]

[edit] Observatory

The Polar Research Institute of China deployed a robotic observatory called PLATO (PLATeau Observatory) on the dome in January 2008.[3] PLATO was designed and built by the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia to provide a platform from which astronomical observations and site-testing could be conducted.[4] Various institutions from Australia, US, China and the UK provided instruments that were deployed with PLATO, these instruments included CSTAR, Gattini, PreHEAT, Snodar, Nigel and the PLATO web cameras.

The Institute of Remote Sensing Applications, Chinese Academy of Sciences [1] established a wireless network technology based observation system called DomeA-WSN on the dome in January 2008.[5]

The Kunlun Station, China's third Station in Antarctica, was set up at the dome on January 27, 2009.[6] Thus far the Antarctic Kunlun Station is suitable as as a summer station, but there are plans to develop it further and build an airfield nearby to ease servicing, as it is not reachable by helicopters.[1]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c "Dome A - coldest place on Earth". Wondermondo. http://www.wondermondo.com/Countries/An/Antarctica/Antarctica/DomeA.htm. 
  2. ^ Saunders, Will; Lawrence, Jon S.; Storey, John W. V.; Ashley, Michael C. B.; Kato, Seiji; Minnis, Patrick; Winker, David M.; Liu, Guiping et al. (2009), "Where Is the Best Site on Earth? Domes A, B, C, and F, and Ridges A and B", Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 121 (883): 976–992, Bibcode 2009PASP..121..976S, doi:10.1086/605780 
  3. ^ "International team establishes unique observatory in Antarctica". spaceref.com. 2008-02-03. http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.nl.html?pid=24685. Retrieved 2008-02-05. 
  4. ^ "PLATO - Dome A robotic observatory". UNSW. 2009-12-22. http://mcba11.phys.unsw.edu.au/~plato/. Retrieved 2009-12-22. 
  5. ^ "中国科考队在南极Dome-A成功安装无线传感器网络". 2008-06-30. http://www.chinanews.com.cn/gn/news/2008/01-24/1144158.shtml. Retrieved 30 November 2008. 
  6. ^ "China sets up 3rd Antarctic research station". 2009-01-28. http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2009-01/28/content_7430570.htm. Retrieved 28 January 2009. 

[edit] External links

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