Arctic Freeboard and Snow Depth From Near‐Coincident CryoSat‐2 and ICESat‐2 (CRYO2ICE) Observations: A First Examination of Winter Sea Ice During 2020–2022

Author:

Fredensborg Hansen Renée M.123ORCID,Skourup Henriette1ORCID,Rinne Eero2,Høyland Knut V.3,Landy Jack C.4ORCID,Merkouriadi Ioanna5ORCID,Forsberg René1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geodesy and Earth Observation National Space Institute, DTU Space, The Technical University of Denmark (DTU) Kgs. Lyngby Denmark

2. Department of Arctic Geophysics The University Centre in Svalbard (UNIS) Longyearbyen Norway

3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) Trondheim Norway

4. Department of Physics and Technology UiT The Arctic University of Norway Tromsø Norway

5. Finnish Meteorological Institute, Earth Observation Research Helsinki Finland

Abstract

AbstractIn the summer of 2020, ESA changed the orbit of CryoSat‐2 to align periodically with NASA's ICESat‐2 mission, a campaign known as CRYO2ICE, which allows for near‐coincident CryoSat‐2 and ICESat‐2 observations in space and time over the Arctic until summer 2022, where the CRYO2ICE Antarctic campaign was initiated. This study investigates the Arctic CRYO2ICE radar and laser freeboards acquired by CryoSat‐2 and ICESat‐2, respectively, during the winter seasons of 2020–2022, and derives snow depths from their differences along the orbits. Along‐track snow depth observations can provide high‐resolution snow depth distributions which are vital for air‐ice‐ocean heat and momentum transfer, understanding light transmission, and snow‐ice‐interactions. Generally, ICESat‐2 is backscattered at a surface above the elevation of the CryoSat‐2 signal. CRYO2ICE snow depths are thinner than the daily model‐ or passive‐microwave‐based snow depth composites used for comparison, with differences being most pronounced in the Atlantic and Pacific Arctic. Satellite‐derived and model‐based snow estimates show similar seasonal accumulation over first‐year ice, but CRYO2ICE has limited seasonal accumulation over multi‐year ice which is linked to a slow increase in ICESat‐2, and to some extent CryoSat‐2, freeboards. We present a first estimation of spaceborne along‐track snow depth estimates with average uncertainty of 10–11 ± 2–3 cm for 7‐km segments, with random and systematic contributions of 7 and 4 cm. These observations show the potential for along‐track dual‐frequency observations of snow depth from the future Copernicus mission CRISTAL; but they also highlight uncertainties in radar penetration and the correlation length scales of snow topography that still require further research.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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