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Spatial Variability of Barrow-Area Shore-Fast Sea Ice and Its Relationships to Passive Microwave Emissivity

Maslanik, J.A.   Sturm, M.   Rivas, M.B.   Gasiewski, A.J.   Heinrichs, J.F.   Herzfeld, U.C.   Holmgren, J.   Klein, M.   Markus, T.   Perovich, D.K.   Sonntag, J.G.   Stroeve, J.C.   Tape, K.  
Colorado Center for Astrodynamics Res., Colorado Univ., Boulder, CO
This paper appears in: Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publication Date: Nov. 2006
Volume: 44 , Issue: 11 , Part 1
On page(s): 3021 - 3031
Location: Edinburgh, UK
ISSN: 0196-2892
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1109/TGRS.2006.879557
Current Version Published: 2006-10-30

Abstract
Aircraft-acquired passive microwave data, laser radar height observations, RADARSAT synthetic aperture radar imagery, and in situ measurements obtained during the AMSR-Ice03 experiment are used to investigate relationships between microwave emission and ice characteristics over several space scales. The data fusion allows delineation of the shore-fast ice and pack ice in the Barrow area, AK, into several ice classes. Results show good agreement between observed and Polarimetric Scanning Radiometer (PSR)-derived snow depths over relatively smooth ice, with larger differences over ridged and rubbled ice. The PSR results are consistent with the effects on snow depth of the spatial distribution and nature of ice roughness, ridging, and other factors such as ice age. Apparent relationships exist between ice roughness and the degree of depolarization of emission at 10, 19, and 37 GHz. This depolarization would yield overestimates of total ice concentration using polarization-based algorithms, with indications of this seen when the NT-2 algorithm is applied to the PSR data. Other characteristics of the microwave data, such as effects of grounding of sea ice and large contrast between sea ice and adjacent land, are also apparent in the PSR data. Overall, the results further demonstrate the importance of macroscale ice roughness conditions such as ridging and rubbling on snow depth and microwave emissivity

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