Cryosphere glossary

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z

edge wasting

process by which warm water erodes iceberg above the waterline

effective terrestrial radiation

the difference between the outgoing infrared (longwave) terrestrial radiation of the earth's surface and the downward infrared counter-radiation from the atmosphere.

electrical conductivity

the inverse of electrical resistivity.

electrical properties of frozen ground

the dielectric constant (or relative permitivity), electrical conductivity and electrical resistivity are the major electrical properties governing the flow of electric current through frozen ground.

electricity resistivity

the property of a material that determines the electrical current flowing through a centimetre cube of the material when an electrical potential is applied to opposite faces of the cube.

electromagnetic wave

an oscillation of the electric or magnetic field associated with the propagation of energy; characterized by their wavelengths and amplitude; propagate at the speed of light.

emissivity

the amount of electromagnetic energy (primarily at wavelengths longer than 1.0 micrometer) that an object emits; for example, the earth emits longwave radiation primarily in the infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum, but also in longer microwave wavelengths; the emissivity of an object varies as the fourth power of its absolute temperature.

end moraine

an arch-shaped ridge of moraine found near the end of a glacier.

englacial moraine

dust and/or rock inside a glacier. This debris can become lodged in glacial ice after falling through crevasses.

epigenetic ice

ground ice developed in epigenetic permafrost, or in previously formed syngenetic permafrost.

epigenetic ice wedge

an ice wedge developed in epigenetic permafrost, or in previously formed syngenetic permafrost.

epigenetic permafrost

permafrost that formed through lowering of the permafrost base in previously deposited sediment or other earth material.

equator

the line of latitude 0°, which is equidistant from the poles, and which separates the Northern Hemisphere from the Southern Hemisphere.

equi-temperature metamorphism

snow metamorphism that occurs under relatively consistent temperature conditions.

equilibrium line

boundary between the accumulation area and ablation area where the mass balance is zero.

equilibrium metamorphism

snow metamorphism that occurs when there are large differences in convex and concave portions of a crystal.

equilibrium permafrost

permafrost that is in thermal equilibrium with the existing mean annual surface or sea-bottom temperature and with the geothermal heat flux.

equilibrium zone

zone of a glacier in which the amount of precipitation that falls is equal to the amount that melts the following summer.

equinox

either of the two points of intersection of the sun's apparent annual path and the plane of the earth's equator; in the northern hemisphere the spring (vernal) equinox falls on or about 21 March, and the autumnal equinox on or about 22 September.

error

the difference between a measured value of a quantity and its true value; different types of errors are inherent to observations.