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  4. Satellite remote sensing of Antarctic sea-ice roughness using scatterometer data
 
conference poster not in proceedings

Satellite remote sensing of Antarctic sea-ice roughness using scatterometer data

Fraser, A.
•
Toyota, T.
•
Jansen, P. W.
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2014
IGS Sea ice in a changing environment

While sea-ice concentration is frequently observed from polar orbiting passive microwave satellite instruments, equivalent large-scale information on sea-ice sub-metre-scale roughness is currently unknown. Roughness on this scale is closely related to sea-ice thickness, and has implications for primary productivity near the ice/ocean interface, and flow-on effects for ecosystems. C-band (~5 GHz) off-nadir microwave backscatter strength from sea ice is sensitive to many physical characteristics of the sea ice. During summertime and early autumn, liquid water-related processes dominate backscatter variability (formation of melt water and superimposed ice, snow/ice interface flooding). However, during freezing conditions, backscatter variability reduces in the inner pack, and backscatter becomes more representative of snow/ice interface or air/snow interface roughness (dry snow on the order of 1 m thick is largely transparent at C-band, though experimental results suggest a significant portion of backscatter occurs at the air/snow interface). We demonstrate that EUMETSAT Advanced Scatterometer (ASCAT) C-band scatterometer isotropic roughness data are sensitive to sea-ice roughness. Validation is provided by helicopter-mounted C-band nadir backscatter radar data and lidar swath data acquired in early spring, 2007, during the Australian-led Sea Ice Physics and Ecosystems eXperiment (SIPEX) campaign, and newly-acquired measurements of rugosity and snow/ice interface roughness from Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV)-derived multibeam sonar acquired during the follow-up marine science voyage, SIPEX II. Using high-resolution sea-ice motion vectors from passive microwave imagery, we also investigate the links between large-scale sea-ice convergence and sub-metre-scale roughness.

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Type
conference poster not in proceedings
Author(s)
Fraser, A.
Toyota, T.
Jansen, P. W.
Kimura, N.
Lieser, J. L.
Williams, G. D.
Trujillo Gomez, Ernesto  
Leonard, Katherine Colby  
Maksym, T.
Massom, R. A.
Date Issued

2014

Written at

EPFL

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CRYOS  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
IGS Sea ice in a changing environment

Hobart, Australia

10-14 March, 2014

Available on Infoscience
March 16, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/112514
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