Air Bone Radar
Air Bone Radar
Air Bone Radar
210
6
0
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12 10 8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6
cm eq. H
2
O / yr
Fig. 2.9 Mass loss from Alaskan Glaciers in cm of water equivalent per year from GRACE
(Image courtesy of S. Luthcke, NASA GSFC)
2 Airborne and Space-borne Remote Sensing of Cryosphere 21
The Seasonal Snow Pack
Seasonal snow cover plays an important role in regional hydrology and water
resource management. Rapid melting of the seasonal snow pack across the northern
Great Plains in April 1997 resulted in catastrophic ooding of the Red River. From
a climate perspective, the bright snow surface also serves as an effective mirror for
returning incoming solar radiation back into space thus modulating the planetary
heat budget.
The spectral reectivity differences between snow, cloud, and other land cover
types enables the seasonal snow cover to be routinely mapped globally using visible
and infrared sensors such as NOAAs AVHRR, NASAs MODIS, and ESAs
MERIS instruments. Snow may be mapped based on visual inspection of multi-
spectral imagery. Automatic snow detection is accomplished by computing the
normalized difference between, for example, the MODIS visible band
(0.5450.565 mm) and the near infrared band (1.6281.652 mm). Snow is detected
when the normalized difference exceeds a threshold value of 0.4 and when other
criteria on land and cloud cover are met [85] (Fig. 2.10). Based on analysis of the
NOAA 35 year data record, Dery and Brown [86] conclude that springtime snow
extent across the northern hemisphere declined by some 1.28 10
6
km
2
over
a 35 year period.
Snow thickness and hence indirectly the mass of snow are key variables for
estimating the volume of water available in a reservoir and potentially releasable as
runoff. The most successful techniques to date have relied on passive-microwave-
based algorithms. One approach for estimating snow thickness is to difference 19
and 37 GHz brightness temperature data that along with a proportionality constant
yields an estimate of the snow thickness. The algorithm is based on the fact that
19 GHz radiation tends to minimize variations in ground temperature because it is
less affected by the snow pack. The 37 GHz radiation is strongly scattered by the
snow grains and brightness temperature at this frequency decreases rapidly with
snow thickness/snow water equivalent. Factors which confuse this algorithm
include topography and changes in ground cover [87].
Information about the seasonal onset of snowmelt can be obtained frommicrowave
data. A few percent increase in the amount of free water in the snow pack causes the
Fig. 2.10 Snow cover extent
from NASAs MODIS.
Increasing shades of gray
indicate greater percentages
of snow cover within each
pixel. Brown denotes snow-
free surface
22 K.C. Jezek
snow emissivity to approach unity resulting in a dramatic increase in passive micro-
wave brightness temperature. This fact has been successfully used to track the annual
melt extent on the ice sheets and also to track the springtime melt progression across
the arctic. Higher resolution estimates of melt extent can be obtained with
scatterometer and SAR data. These data generally show an earlier spring time date
for the beginning of melt onset and a later date for the fall freeze [88].
Lake and River Ice
Lake and river ice form seasonally at mid and high latitudes and elevations. River ice
forms under the owof turbulent water which governs its thickness. The combination
of ice jams on rivers with increased water ow during springtime snowmelt can result
in catastrophic oods. Lake ice forms under less dynamic conditions resulting in
a smoother ice surface that acts as an insulator to the underlying water. Hence
lacustrine biology is strongly inuenced by the formation of the ice canopy. The
start of ice formation and the start of springtime ice break up are proxy indicators for
changes in local climate as well as impacts on the ability to navigate these waterways.
Streams, rivers, lakes of all sizes dot the landscape. Locally, ice cover
observations can be made from aircraft. Regionally or globally, river and lake ice
monitoring is challenging because physical dimensions (long but narrow rivers)
often require high resolution instruments like medium- to high-resolution optical
data (Fig. 2.11) or SAR to resolve details [89]. Moreover, since the exact date of
key processes, such as the onset of ice formation or river-ice breakup are unknown,
voluminous data sets are required to support large-scale studies.
Fig. 2.11 January 2010 NASA MODIS image of ice formed on the St. Lawrence River. Thin
layers of new ice are distorted into swirls by the surface currents (center left). Thicker ice is held
fast to the southern shore (Image courtesy of MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC)
2 Airborne and Space-borne Remote Sensing of Cryosphere 23
Permafrost
Permafrost presents one of the greatest challenges for regional remote sensing
technologies [7, 90]. The near surface active layer, the shallow zone where seasonal
temperature swings allow for annual freeze and thaw, is complicated by different
soil types and vegetative cover. This combination tends to hide the underlying
persistently frozen ground from the usual airborne and space-borne techniques
mentioned above. Even in winter when the active layer is frozen, remote sensing
of the permafrost at depth is extremely difcult because of the spatially variable
electrical properties of the material. Thus far, the most successful airborne and
space-borne remote sensing methods involve optical photography to identify sur-
face morphologies as proxy indicators of the presence of permafrost. Patterned
ground and pingos are examples of the types of features visible in optical imagery
and that are diagnostic of underlying permafrost. SAR interferometry has been
suggested as another tool that can be used to monitor terrain for slumping
associated with thawing permafrost. Figure 2.12 shows E01 Hyperion satellite,
visible-band data collected over the north slope of Alaska. Shallow, oval shaped
lakes form in thermokarst, which develops when ice rich permafrost thaws and
forms a hummocky terrain. Lakes and depressions left by drained lakes are densely
distributed across the tundra. The long axis of the lake is oriented perpendicular to
the prevailing wind direction. SAR intensity images have been used to determine
that most of these small lakes freeze completely to the bottom during the winter
months [91].
Recent Developments in Airborne Radar Ice Sounding of Glaciers
Today, airborne radars operating between about 5 and 500 MHz are the primary
tools used for measuring ice sheet thickness, basal topography, and inferring basal
properties over large areas. These radars are typically operated as altimeters and
acquire prole data only along nadir tracks that are often separated by 5 or more
kilometers. The along track resolution is met by forming a synthetic aperture and
the vertical resolution of the thickness is met by transmitting high bandwidth signal.
Fig. 2.12 EO-1 Hyperion satellite data acquired over the north coast of Alaska (70.5 N 156.5 W)
and about 50 km inland from the coast, which is toward the right on this image. The image is
7.5 km wide (top to bottom). Color composite using channels 16 23 and 28
24 K.C. Jezek
Even though highly accurate thickness measurements can be achieved, information
in the third cross-track dimension is absent.
While the surface properties of the ice sheets are becoming increasing well
documented, the nature of the glacier bed remains obscured by its icy cover.
Revealing basal properties, such as the topography and the presence or absence
of subglacial water, is important if we are to better estimate the ux of ice from the
interior ice sheet to the sea and to forecast anticipated changes of the size of the ice
sheets. Recent experiments demonstrate how it is possible to go beyond airborne
nadir sounding of glaciers and to produce three-dimensional images of the glacier
bed. This development represents a major step forward in ice sheet glaciology by
providing new information about the basal boundary conditions modulating the
ow of the ice and revealing for the rst time geomorphologic processes occurring
at the bed of modern ice sheets. The approach relies on the application of radar
tomography to UHF/VHF airborne radar data collected using multiple, independent
antennas and receivers. Tomography utilizes phase and amplitude information from
the independent receivers to isolate the direction of a natural target relative to the
aircraft. Combined with the range to the target based on the echo travel time and
position of the aircraft, tomographic methods yield swaths of reectivity and topo-
graphic information on each side of the aircraft [92].
Cooperative Efforts to Observe, Monitor, and Understand
the Cryosphere
Several cooperative, international scientic studies of the high latitudes have been
organized. Beginning with the 1897 voyage of the Belgica to the Antarctic Penin-
sula and continuing to the 2007 International Polar Year, studies have relied on the
most recent technologies to increase knowledge of the polar regions. To realize the
benet of the growing constellation of international satellites to the scientic
objectives of the 2007 International Polar Year (IPY) (Fig. 2.13), the Global
Interagency IPY Polar Snapshot Year (GIIPSY) project engaged the science com-
munity to develop consensus polar science requirements and objectives that could
best and perhaps only be met using the international constellation of earth observing
satellites [93]. Requirements focused on all aspects of the cryosphere and range
from sea ice to permafrost to snow cover and ice sheets. Individual topics include
development of high-resolution digital elevation models of outlet glaciers using
stereo optical systems, measurements of ice surface velocity using interferometric
synthetic aperture radar, and frequently repeated measurements of sea ice motion
using medium resolution optical and microwave imaging instruments.
The IPY Space Task Group (STG), convened by the World Meteorological
Organization (WMO), formed the functional link between the GIIPSY science
community and the international space agencies. STG membership included
representatives from the national space agencies of Italy, Germany, France, UK,
2 Airborne and Space-borne Remote Sensing of Cryosphere 25
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26 K.C. Jezek
US, Canada, Russia, China, Japan, and the European Space Agency (ESA), which
in itself represents 19 nations. The STG determined how best to satisfy GIIPSY
science requirements in a fashion that distributed the acquisition burden across the
space agencies and recognized the operational mandates that guide the activities of
each agency.
The STG adopted four primary data acquisition objectives for its contribution to
the IPY. These are:
Pole to coast multi-frequency InSAR measurements of ice-sheet surface velocity
Repeat ne-resolution SAR mapping of the entire Southern Ocean sea ice cover
for sea ice motion
One complete high resolution visible and thermal IR (Vis/IR) snapshot of
circumpolar permafrost
Pan-Arctic high and moderate resolution Vis/IR snapshots of freshwater (lake
and river) freeze-up and breakup
The STG achieved most of these objectives including: acquiring Japanese,
ALOS L-band, ESA Envisat and Canadian Radarsat C-band, and German
TerraSAR-X (Fig. 2.14) and Italian COSMO_SKYMED X band SAR imagery
over the polar ice sheets [94]; acquiring pole to coast InSAR data for ice sheet
surface velocity; optically derived, high-resolution digital elevation models of the
perimeter regions of ice caps and ice sheets; coordinated campaigns to ll gaps in
Arctic and Antarctic sea ice cover; extensive acquisitions of optical imagery of
permafrost terrain; observations of atmospheric chemistry using the Sciamachy
instrument.
Future Directions
Emerging sensor and platform technologies hold great promise for future airborne
and space-borne remote sensing of the cryosphere. Airborne programs are likely to
continue to use large manned aircraft in a fashion similar to NASAs IceBridge
program which integrates a sophisticated suite of instruments including lidars,
radars, gravimeters, magnetometers, optical mapping systems, and GPS. But
there will also be a steady shift toward smaller, more dedicated unmanned aerial
vehicles capable of remaining on station for longer periods and fullling some of
the temporal coverage requirements that are difcult to satisfy with larger aircraft
requiring a substantial number of crewmen.
It is worth noting again that ice sounding radars are exclusively deployed on
aircraft for terrestrial research. This is driven operationally by the challenges of
ionospheric distortions and by governmental controls on frequency allocations
available for remote sensing applications designed to limit interference with
communications and other commercial uses of the frequency bands. Certainly the
latter is not an issue for other planetary studies and in fact the Martian ice caps have
been successfully sounded from the orbiting MARSIS and SHARAD radars [95].
2 Airborne and Space-borne Remote Sensing of Cryosphere 27
These extraterrestrial successes motivate continuing interest in deploying similar
instrument for observing Earths ice cover in the future.
As indicated in Fig. 2.13, there will be an ongoing constellation of satellites
capable of collecting valuable cryospheric data. Here, coordination amongst the
Fig. 2.14 German Aerospace Center TerraSAR-X observations of the Nimrod Glacier (inset map
of Antarctica). Ice oes around a central nunatak and down toward the Ross Ice Shelf. Crevasses
appear in conjunction with the interruption of ow by the nunatak. Cooperative use of Canadian,
German, European Space Agency, Italian, and Japanese synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellites
along with ground segment and data processing capabilities provided by the United States yielded
a rich and diverse SAR data set that will be a lasting legacy of the IPY (TerraSAR-X data courtesy
of D. Floricioiu, German Aerospace Center. Inset coastline derived from RADARSAT-1 Antarctic
Mapping Project map)
28 K.C. Jezek
different space faring nations will be key to realizing the greatest scientic benet.
Lessons about cooperation gleaned from the IPY can be protably extended to the
acquisition of data and the development of geophysical products beyond the polar
regions to all sectors of the cryosphere. There could also be generally better
integration of the atmospheric chemistry and polar meteorological communities,
as well as incorporation of gravity and magnetic geopotential missions into the
coordination discussions. It is also possible to envision discussion and collaboration
on emerging technologies and capabilities such as the Russian Arktika Project [96]
and advanced subsurface imaging radars. A primary objective of continued coordi-
nation of international efforts is securing collections of space-borne snapshots of
the cryosphere through the further development of a virtual Polar Satellite Constella-
tion [97]. A natural vehicle for adopting lessons learned from GIIPSY/STG into
a more encompassing international effort could be the Global Cryosphere Watch
[98] recently proposed by WMO to be in support of the cryospheric science goals
specied for the Integrated Global Observing Strategy Cryosphere Theme [1].
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