Abstract
Abstract. Area-based measurements of snow water equivalent (SWE) are important for understanding earth system processes such as glacier mass balance, winter
hydrological storage in drainage basins, and ground thermal regimes. Remote sensing techniques are ideally suited for wide-scale area-based mapping
with the most commonly used technique to measure SWE being passive microwave, which is limited to coarse spatial resolutions of 25 km or
greater and to areas without significant topographic variation. Passive microwave also has a negative bias for large SWE. Another method is
repeat-pass synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR) that allows measurement of SWE change at much higher spatial resolution. However, it
has not been widely adopted because (1) the phase unwrapping problem has not been robustly addressed, especially for interferograms with poor
coherence, and (2) SWE change maps scaled directly from repeat-pass interferograms are not an absolute measurement but contain unknown offsets for
each contiguous coherent area. We develop and test a novel method for repeat-pass InSAR-based dry-snow SWE estimation that exploits the sensitivity
of the dry-snow refraction-induced InSAR phase to topographic variations. The method robustly estimates absolute SWE change at spatial resolutions
of < 1 km without the need for phase unwrapping. We derive a quantitative signal model for this new SWE change estimator and identify
the relevant sources of bias. The method is demonstrated using both simulated SWE distributions and a 9-year RADARSAT-2 (C-band,
5.405 GHz) spotlight-mode dataset near Inuvik, Northwest Territories (NWT), Canada. SWE results are compared to in situ snow survey measurements and estimates from
ERA5 reanalysis. Our method performs well in high-relief areas, thus providing complementary coverage to passive-microwave-based SWE
estimation. Further, our method has the advantage of requiring only a single wavelength band and thus can utilize existing spaceborne synthetic
aperture radar systems.
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
Cited by
7 articles.
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