Simulated Ka- and Ku-band radar altimeter height and freeboard estimation on snow-covered Arctic sea ice
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Published:2021-04-13
Issue:4
Volume:15
Page:1811-1822
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Tonboe Rasmus T., Nandan Vishnu, Yackel John, Kern StefanORCID, Pedersen Leif ToudalORCID, Stroeve Julienne
Abstract
Abstract. Owing to differing and complex snow geophysical properties, radar
waves of different wavelengths undergo variable penetration through
snow-covered sea ice. However, the mechanisms influencing radar altimeter
backscatter from snow-covered sea ice, especially at Ka- and Ku-band
frequencies, and the impact on the Ka- and Ku-band radar scattering horizon
or the “track point” (i.e. the scattering layer depth detected by the radar
re-tracker) are not well understood. In this study, we evaluate the Ka- and
Ku-band radar scattering horizon with respect to radar penetration and ice
floe buoyancy using a first-order scattering model and the Archimedes
principle. The scattering model is forced with snow depth data from the
European Space Agency (ESA) climate change initiative (CCI) round-robin data
package, in which NASA's Operation IceBridge (OIB) data and climatology are
included, and detailed snow geophysical property profiles from the Canadian
Arctic. Our simulations demonstrate that the Ka- and Ku-band track point
difference is a function of snow depth; however, the simulated track point
difference is much smaller than what is reported in the literature from the
Ku-band CryoSat-2 and Ka-band SARAL/AltiKa satellite radar altimeter
observations. We argue that this discrepancy in the Ka- and Ku-band track
point differences is sensitive to ice type and snow depth and its
associated geophysical properties. Snow salinity is first increasing the Ka-
and Ku-band track point difference when the snow is thin and then
decreasing the difference when the snow is thick (>0.1 m). A
relationship between the Ku-band radar scattering horizon and snow depth is
found. This relationship has implications for (1) the use of snow climatology
in the conversion of radar freeboard into sea ice thickness and (2) the
impact of variability in measured snow depth on the derived ice thickness.
For both (1) and (2), the impact of using a snow climatology versus the actual
snow depth is relatively small on the radar freeboard, only raising the
radar freeboard by 0.03 times the climatological snow depth plus 0.03 times
the real snow depth. The radar freeboard is a function of both radar
scattering and floe buoyancy. This study serves to enhance our understanding
of microwave interactions towards improved accuracy of snow depth and sea ice thickness retrievals via the combination of the currently operational and
ESA's forthcoming Ka- and Ku-band dual-frequency CRISTAL radar altimeter
missions.
Funder
European Space Agency Marine Environmental Observation Prediction and Response Network Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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