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Bonnie Light

Senior Principal Physicist

Affiliate Professor, Atmospheric Sciences

Email

bonlight@uw.edu

Phone

206-543-9824

Research Interests

Physical and Optical Properties of Sea Ice

Department Affiliation

Polar Science Center

Education

B.S. Engineering, Cornell University, 1986

M.S. Electrical Engineering, University of Maryland - College Park, 1990

M.S. Atmospheric Sciences, University of Washington - Seattle, 1995

Ph.D. Atmospheric Sciences, University of Washington - Seattle, 2000

Videos

Earth's Frozen Oceans: Properties and Importance of Sea Ice

Bonnie Light and Maddie Smith present a webinar for the National Ocean Science Bowl (NOSB) Professional Development Program. The NOSB is an academic competition for high school students. This webinar by Light and Smith provides subject matter expertise to NOSB coaches, organizers, and student competitors on the 2021 theme: Plunging Into Our Polar Oceans.

22 Jan 2021

MOSAiC: Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate

Bonnie Light's video tutorial on Sunlight and Arctic Sea Ice, made for the MOSAiC "Frozen in the Ice: Exploring the Arctic" series.

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19 Mar 2020

The goal of the MOSAiC expedition is to take the closest look ever at the Arctic as the epicenter of global warming and to gain insights that are key to understanding global climate change. Hundreds of researchers from 20 countries will work from the icebreaker Polarstern as it is frozen into and drifts with the sea ice for 1 year, 2019–2020. Bonnie Light joins the 5th leg of the expedition during summer 2020 to study the optical properties of melting sea ice.

Extreme Summer Melt: Assessing the Habitability and Physical Structure of Rotting First-year Arctic Sea Ice

Sea ice cover in the Arctic during summer is shrinking and thinning. The melt season is lengthening and the prevalence of "rotten" sea ice is increasing.

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30 Jul 2015

A multidisciplinary team of researchers is making a series of three monthly (May, June, and July) expeditions to Barrow, AK. They are measuring the summertime melt processes that transform the physical properties of sea ice, which in turn transform the biological and chemical properties of the ice habitat.

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Publications

2000-present and while at APL-UW

Spatial variability in surface brightness and solar energy deposition of Arctic sea ice

Tao, R., M. Nicolaus, C. Katlein, N. Fuchs, N. Neckel, L. Buth, M.M. Smith, B. Light, S. Graupner, and C. Haas, "Spatial variability in surface brightness and solar energy deposition of Arctic sea ice," Elem. Sci. Anth., 13, doi:10.1525/elementa.2024.00084, 2025.

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18 Oct 2025

Sea ice modulates the transfer of shortwave radiative energy fluxes within the Arctic atmosphere-sea-ice-ocean system. Understanding and predicting these fluxes comes with greatest uncertainties during the melt and freeze-up seasons, when the sea ice surface is strongly heterogeneous and changing rapidly. Then, the partitioning of solar radiative fluxes between atmosphere, ice, and ocean has greatest impacts on the surface energy budget, controlling sea ice melt and formation. Here, we investigated changes and impacts of sea ice surface variability by analyzing high-resolution red-green-blue aerial imagery obtained during the Multidisciplinary Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) expedition in 2020. We used pixel brightness from processed aerial images as a proxy of surface albedo, because such data are frequently available and obtainable from commercial digital cameras. The results allowed quantification of fluxes on floe-scales and also revealed the seasonality of sea ice spatial heterogeneity, which was strongest in the middle of melt season driven by melt pond processes. On scales of 10 m x 10 m, a magnitude larger than the traditional single in-situ optical observations (although many are made over larger scales), distinct surface conditions, for example, individual melt ponds, resulted in differences of energy deposition into the ice by more than 600%. The effects of spatial variability were minimized by integrating over areas 200 m x 200 m and larger. We suggest considering these scales for future energy budget studies and airborne observations, because sufficient parts of different surface features are included. The concept of surface brightness and aerial photographs might help to bridge in-situ observations to even larger scales, including fractions of open water. It may also be used to upscale observations of under-ice light regimes by providing spatially continuous surface brightness that governs the light transmittance, thus to improve our understanding of the coupled system, including ecological functions.

Theoretical estimates of light transmittance at the MOSAiC central observatory

Perovich, D., and 17 others including B. Light and M. Webster, "Theoretical estimates of light transmittance at the MOSAiC central observatory, " Elem. Sci. Anth., 13, doi:10.1525/elementa.2024.00076, 2025.

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22 Jul 2025

Light transmission through a sea ice cover has strong implications for the heat content of the upper ocean, the magnitude of bottom and lateral ice melt, and primary productivity in the ocean. Light transmittance in the vicinity of the Multidisciplinary Drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) Central Observatory was estimated by driving a two-stream radiative transfer model with physical property observations. Data include point and transect observations of snow depth, surface scattering layer thickness, ice thickness, and pond depth. The temporal evolution of light transmittance at specific sites and the spatial variability along transect lines were computed. Ponds transmitted 4–6 times as much solar energy per unit area as bare ice. On July 25, ponds covered about 18% of the area and contributed roughly 50% of the sunlight transmitted through the ice cover. Approximating the transmittance along a transect line using average values for the physical properties will always result in lower light transmittance than finding the average light transmittance using the full distribution of points. Transmitted solar energy calculated using the standard five ice thickness categories and three surface types used in the Los Alamos sea ice model CICE, the sea ice component of many weather and climate models, was only about 1 W m-2 less than using all the points along the transect. This minor difference suggests that the important processes and resulting feedbacks relating to solar transmittance can be represented in models that use five or more categories of ice thickness distributions.

Evolution of the microstructure and reflectance of the surface scattering layer on melting, level Arctic sea ice

Macfarlane, A.R., R. Dadic, M.M. Smith, B. Light, M. Nicolaus, H. Henna-Reetta, M. Webster, F. Linhardt, S. Hammerle, and M. Schneebeli, "Evolution of the microstructure and reflectance of the surface scattering layer on melting, level Arctic sea ice," Elem. Sci. Anth., 11, doi:10.1525/elementa.2022.00103, 2024.

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6 Apr 2024

The microstructure of the uppermost portions of a melting Arctic sea ice cover has a disproportionately large influence on how incident sunlight is reflected and absorbed in the ice/ocean system. The surface scattering layer (SSL) effectively backscatters solar radiation and keeps the surface albedo of melting ice relatively high compared to ice with the SSL manually removed. Measurements of albedo provide information on how incoming shortwave radiation is partitioned by the SSL and have been pivotal to improving climate model parameterizations. However, the relationship between the physical and optical properties of the SSL is still poorly constrained. Until now, radiative transfer models have been the only way to infer the microstructure of the SSL. During the MOSAiC expedition of 2019–2020, we took samples and, for the first time, directly measured the microstructure of the SSL on bare sea ice using X-ray micro-computed tomography. We show that the SSL has a highly anisotropic, coarse, and porous structure, with a small optical diameter and density at the surface, increasing with depth. As the melting surface ablates, the SSL regenerates, maintaining some aspects of its microstructure throughout the melt season. We used the microstructure measurements with a radiative transfer model to improve our understanding of the relationship between physical properties and optical properties at 850 nm wavelength. When the microstructure is used as model input, we see a 10–15% overestimation of the reflectance at 850 nm. This comparison suggests that either a) spatial variability at the meter scale is important for the two in situ optical measurements and therefore a larger sample size is needed to represent the microstructure or b) future work should investigate either i) using a ray-tracing approach instead of explicitly solving the radiative transfer equation or ii) using a more appropriate radiative transfer model.

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In The News

Freezer Lab Work Reveals Sea Ice Properties of MOSAiC Ice Cores

Sea Ice Portal — Alfred Wegener Institut

A group of scientists from four international partner institutions and a filmmaker have come to Bremerhaven to process and analyze sea-ice cores samples from the MOSAiC (2019–2020) expedition. The researchers aim to better understand the growth history of the sea ice and its internal optical properties. This will help them better understand the seasonal changes of the ice cover over its lifetime.

27 Jan 2023

Fact check: Cherry-picked data behind misleading claim that Arctic sea ice hasn't declined since 1989

USA Today, Kate S. Petersen

Arctic sea ice minimum extent — its size at the end of the summer melt — has declined 13% per decade since the late 1970s, according to the National Snow & Ice Data Center and NASA data. However, some social media posts use images from the National Snow & Ice Data Center's public online data tool, Sea Ice Index, to suggest that Arctic sea ice extent has not meaningfully changed in decades.

30 May 2022

Fact check: NASA did not deny warming or say polar ice has increased since 1979

USA Today, Kate Petersen

NASA researchers have documented the loss of trillions of tons of ice from Earth's poles due to human-driven climate change. Citing published reports from the Polar Science Center and other sources, popular social media memes claiming an increase in polar ice since 1979 are swatted down.

21 Jan 2022

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