Report on Ice Measurements with AWAC
Nortek has developed a new measurement capability with the AWAC that allows the Acoustic Surface Tracking (AST) to observe sea ice thickness and maximum ice keel draft from the AWAC ADCP.
Measurements of sea ice presence, ice keel draft, and ice thickness are important for climate studies and engineering design and maintenance of coastal and offshore structures. Building on the success of upward looking sonar systems for ice measurements, Nortek recently introduced new firmware and measurement methods to make observations of sea ice with the Nortek AWAC acoustic Doppler current profiler. The AWAC employs a dedicated, narrow, upward looking vertical transducer to acoustically measure waves (summer) and ice (winter). One of the first commercial applications of this new measurement capability was a project in 2008 to measure ice parameters in support of the design of an offshore structure and its ice armoring system in the Beaufort Sea, Alaska. An analysis of instrumental and environmental error is described
The AWAC ice measurements are compared to a co-located ASL ice profiler and show a mean difference of less than 0.05 m. Ice formation began in mid-October when air temperatures were routinely below -10o C. The thickness increased almost linearly until it peaked in mid-May at about 1.8 m. This represents an increase in ice thickness of approximately 0.01 m/day. The near-surface current velocity from the Nortek AWAC was used to estimate the horizontal length scales and the direction of movement of mobile ice blocks.
AWAC's with ice monitoring capability have already been supplied to numerous government, commercial and academic groups in the USA and Canada for ice monitoring projects. This report, co-authored with Woods Hole Group Inc, and presented at the OCEANS 2010 conference in Seattle, describes one of the first commercial applications of this new capability.

