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  • 1
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    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: The application of aircraft and spacecraft remote sensing techniques to sea ice surveillance is evaluated. The effects of ice in the air-sea-ice system are examined. The measurement principles and characteristics of remote sensing methods for aircraft and spacecraft surveillance of sea ice are described. Consideration is given to ambient visible light, IR, passive microwave, active microwave, and laser altimeter and sonar systems. The applications of these systems to sea ice surveillance are discussed and examples are provided. Particular attention is placed on the use of microwave data and the relation between ice thickness and sea ice interactions. It is noted that spacecraft and aircraft sensing techniques can successfully measure snow cover; ice thickness; ice type; ice concentration; ice velocity field; ocean temperature; surface wind vector field; and air, snow, and ice surface temperatures.
    Keywords: OCEANOGRAPHY
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-17
    Description: Microwave images of sea ice obtained by Nimbus-5 and the NASA CV-990 airborne laboratory are used to determine the time variation of the sea-ice concentration and multiyear ice fraction within the pack ice in the Arctic Basin. The images, constructed from data acquired from the electrically scanned microwave radiometer, are analyzed for four seasons during 1973-1975. Observations indicate significant variations in the sea-ice concentration in the spring, late fall, and early winter. Sea-ice concentrations as low as 50% were detected in large areas in the interior of the Arctic polar sea-ice pack. The applicability of passive-microwave remote sensing for monitoring the time dependence of sea-ice concentration is considered.
    Keywords: OCEANOGRAPHY
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-08-17
    Description: A microwave remote sensing program of sea ice in the Beaufort Sea was conducted during the Arctic Ice Dynamics Joint Experiment (AIDJEX). Several types of both passive and active sensors were used to perform surface and aircraft measurements during all seasons of the year. In situ observations were made of physical properties (salinity, temperature, density, surface roughness), dielectric properties, and passive microwave measurements were made of first-year, multiyear, and first-year/multiyear mixtures. Airborne passive microwave measurements were performed with the electronically scanning microwave radiometer while airborne active microwave measurements were performed by synthetic aperture radar, X- and L-band radar, and a scatterometer.
    Keywords: OCEANOGRAPHY
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: The differences in both the quantity and quality of the nonocean measurements of the Geosat and Seasat altimeters due to the tracker modifications and satellite and antenna design changes are presented. The Geosat tracker exhibits more agility over the rougher surfaces and therefore is able to maintain lock better than Seasat. Large off-nadir attitude excursions created differences in Geosat tracking between cycles. The Geosat altimeter was at times able to track over surfaces Seasat could not, but sometimes the acquisition problem was worse. It is observed that Geosat yields denser coverage, but over land Seasat measurements yield a better overall picture of the general topography. It is concluded that the Geosat elevation data set over land can best be utilized to augment the information obtained from the Seasat data and is most useful when investigating topography at scales less than 100 km.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Geophysical Research Letters (ISSN 0094-8276); 17; 1537-154
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2011-08-17
    Description: This paper presents: (1) a short historical review of the passive microwave research on sea ice, which established the observational and theoretical base permitting the interpretation of the first passive microwave images of earth obtained by the Nimbus-5 ESMR; (2) the construction of a time-lapse motion picture film of a 16-month set of serial ESMR images to aid in the formidable data analysis task; and (3) a few of the most significant findings resulting from an early analysis of these data, using selected ESMR images to illustrate these findings.
    Keywords: OCEANOGRAPHY
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: Landsat Multispectral Scanner near-infrared band images (MSS-7) are used to calculate Antarctic ice concentration values and these results are quantitatively compared to those derived from Nimbus 5 electrically scanning microwave radiometer (ESMR) brightness temperature data. The set of images includes regions near the ice edge and near the continental boundary during late winter or spring. The percentage of ice cover is derived from the microwave data, using an algorithm that incorporates the brightness temperature emissivity and interpolated climatological physical temperatures and that is not dependent on spatial resolution. Cloud-free Landsat images are used to provide an alternative determination of large-scale ice concentrations, but this method is limited in its ability to resolve individual ice flows, especially near the ice edge. A proportional classification procedure is applied to Landsat data based on observed reflection and the results are correlated with similarly-derived ESMR ice concentration values. The corresponding ice concentration values are found to agree to + or - 15%, with the largest uncertainties occurring in regions of low ice concentration.
    Keywords: OCEANOGRAPHY
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research; 87; July 20
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: Available data for antarctic sea ice is examined for the presence of long terms trends which could signal a decrease in the total ice amount being brought on by atmospheric warming due to increased CO2 concentrations. The Nimbus 5 electrically scanning microwave radiometer derived ice concentrations from 1972-1976, after which the scanning multifrequency microwave radiometer on the Nimbus 7 spacecraft was used from 1978-1981. Additionally, ship reports, IR data from the NOAA 5 radiometer, and the Landsat visible light scanner were considered. The data were digitized for analyses, which covered seasonal, year-to-year, trends over several years, and interannual seasonal variations. The total ice amplitude varied by 30 pct annually, and decreases in one area corresponded to increases in ice in others. No particular long-term trends were observed, and it is suggested that the satellite ice coverage data be extended in time in order to uncover any trends that extend beyond 9 yr.
    Keywords: OCEANOGRAPHY
    Type: Science (ISSN 0036-8075); 220; June 3
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: Altimeter measurements of ranges to modelled irregular surfaces are simulated and two correction schemes are used to reconstruct the modelled surfaces from the simulated data. When the cross-track slope is negligible, the problem can be treated as two-dimensional and the relocation method is preferred to the slope correction method. In a two-dimensional test case, 85 percent of the slope-induced rms error was removed by the relocation method. The mean error along profiles of about 75 km or longer is usually reduced more than the rms error. An alternative slope correction scheme, which uses the local slope to calculate the expected error, is less effective in the two-dimensional case. Over a simulated three-dimensional surface, where groundtracks are widely spaced and cross-track slopes are significant, the slope-correction method must be used in at least the cross-track direction.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research; 88; Feb. 28
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: The Seasat-1 radar altimeter data set acquired over both the Antarctic and Greenland continental ice sheets is analyzed to obtain corrected ranges to the ice surface. The radar altimeter functional response over the continental ice sheets is considerably more complex than over the oceans. Causal factors identified in this complicated response include sloping surfaces, undulating ice surfaces with characteristic wavelengths on the same spatial scale as the altimeter beam-limited footprint, off-track reflections, and dynamic lag of the altimeter tracking circuit. Retracking methods using the altimeter return pulse waveforms give range corrections that are typically several meters. The entire set of Seasat-1 altimetry over the continental ice sheets is being retracked by fitting a multi-parameter function to each waveform. Many waveforms have double ramps indicating near-normal reflections from two distinct portions of the ice surface within the altimeter beam. Two independent range measurements differing by less than 25 m are obtained from retracking the double-ramp waveforms.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research; 88; Feb. 28
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: Preliminary results from Seasat radar altimetry over Antarctica north of 72 deg S and Greenland south of 72 deg N are presented. Surface elevations of the ice sheets, obtained from computer retracking of the radar altimeter waveforms, are contoured at 50-m intervals for Greenland and at 100-m intervals for Antarctica. Elevation differences at orbital crossover points are analyzed to obtain a precision of 1.9 m; this figure is partly determined by radial errors of approximately 1.0 m in orbital determination and partly by noise due to ice surface irregularities. Adjustment of the radial components of the orbits to minimize the differences in elevations at crossovers over a small, relatively flat region reduces the rms difference to 0.25 m, which is indicative of the optimum precision obtainable over the ice sheets. However, the precision degrades as the slope of the surface or amplitude of the undulations increases, yielding an overall precision of + or - 1.6 m.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research; 88; Feb. 28
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