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
(1) the temperature at which a pure liquid solidifies under atmospheric pressure (2) the temperature at which a ground material starts to freeze.
the positive pressure developed at ice-water interfaces in soil as it freezes.
rain, the drops of which freeze on impact with the ground or with objects on the earth's surface or with aircraft in flight.
the number of degrees by which the freezing point of an earth material is depressed below 0 degrees Celsius.
permafrost in which the soil particles are not held together by ice.
from the point of view of the submariner, an icey canopy containing many large ice skylights or other features which permit a submarine to surface; there must be more than ten such features per 37 kilometers (30 nautical miles) along the submarine's track.
in meteorology, generally, the interface or transition zone between two air masses of different density; since the temperature distribution is the most important regulator of the atmosphere density, a front almost invariably separates air masses of different temperature; when warmer air replaces the colder, it is a warm front, and vice-versa.
the condition which exists when the temperature near the earth's surface and earth-bound objects falls below freezing (0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit).
the process of alternate freezing and thawing of moisture in soil, rock and other materials, and the resulting effects on materials and on structures placed on, or in, the ground.
a seasonal frost mound produced through doming of seasonally frozen ground by a subsurface accumulation of water under elevated hydraulic potential during progressive freezing of the active layer.
a small mound of soil material, presumed to have been formed by frost action.
a more or less symmetrical zone of frozen ground formed around a buried chilled pipeline or beneath or around a structure maintained at temperatures below 0 degrees Celsius.
the net downslope displacement that occurs when a soil, during a freeze-thaw cycle, expands normal (perpendicular) to the ground surface and settles in a nearly vertical direction.
crystals of ice that form when water vapor becomes a solid (bypassing the liquid phase) and deposits itself on the sea ice surface; frost flowers roughen the surface and dramatically affect its electromagnetic signal.
Image
frost_flowers.jpg

Close-up view of frost flowers.

Don Perovich, U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory
the upward or outward movement of the ground surface (or objects on, or in, the ground) caused by the formation of ice in the soil.
the difference between the elevations of the ground surface before and after the occurrence of frost heave.
cumulative upward displacement of objects embedded in the ground, caused by frost action.
any mound-shaped landform produced by ground freezing combined with accumulation of ground ice due to groundwater movement or the migration of soil moisture.
the movement of the freezing front into the ground during freezing.
effects of frost action on earth materials and on structures placed in or on the ground.