News Release

CO2 bonds in sea ice: Small living creatures with major impact

Business Announcement

Helmholtz Association

Algae in Sea Ice

image: The high salt concentration permits the contents of brine channels to remain in a liquid state even at lower temperatures, and they serve as a habitat for microorganisms. view more 

Credit: Photo: Gerhard Dieckmann /Alfred Wegener Institute

Under normal conditions, water freezes at zero degrees Celsius. But not salt water: Due to the presence of salts, the freezing point of sea water is below zero. And sea water tends to freeze unequally. During freezing, channels in which the salt accumulates, so-called "brine channels," are formed in the ice. The high salt concentration permits the contents of these channels to remain in a liquid state even at lower temperatures, and they serve as a habitat for microorganisms. Together with colleagues, a scientist from the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) is currently analyzing the characteristics and distribution of these channels in which CO2 is bound by the organisms which, in turn, diminishes the greenhouse effect.

The existing microorganisms are called diatoms and are at the bottom of the food chain in the marine ecosystem of the polar region. They also convert about 20 percent of the global CO2. The scientists want to understand how the tiny channels and their dwellers are distributed in the ice, what structures they exhibit, and under which circumstances they change. "Direct measurements of these structural properties are not possible without impairing the habitat," explains Dr. Sibylle Gemming from the HZDR. "That's why we're developing mathematical models which will be the basis for computer simulations." The comparison of simulated and measured properties will permit conclusions to be drawn about the channel formation process.

According to the scientists, the findings of their research could serve as input variables for global climate models. That is why German researchers from Dresden, Bremerhaven (Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research within the Helmholtz Association), and Münster (Münster University of Applied Sciences) are also cooperating with colleagues from the Norwegian Polar Institute in Tromsø. The project, which is subsidized by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) and the German Research Foundation (DFG), is headed by the quantum particle physicist Prof. Klaus Morawetz (Münster University of Applied Sciences).

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For more information, please contact:
Dr. Sibylle Gemming
Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf
Institute of Ion Beam Physics and Materials Research
Phone: 49-351-260-2470
s.gemming@hzdr.de

Press Contact
Dr. Christine Bohnet
Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf
Press Officer
Phone: 49-351-260-2450 or 49-160-969-288-56
c.bohnet@hzdr.de | http://www.hzdr.de

The long-term objective of the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) is to ensure excellence in research in those fields that are of great relevance to our society. That is why the HZDR research focuses on the following topics:
How does matter behave in strong fields and at small-scale dimensions?
How can malignant tumors be identified at an early stage and treated effectively?
How can resources and energy be used safely and efficiently?

To answer these scientific questions, five large-scale research facilities provide, in part, unique research opportunities. These facilities are also accessible to external users.

The HZDR has been a member of the Helmholtz Association, Germany's largest research organization, since January 1, 2011. It has four locations in Dresden, Freiberg, Leipzig, and Grenoble and employs around 800 people – 380 of whom are scientists including 120 doctoral candidates.


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