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Original Articles

Fully polarimetric airborne SAR and ERS SAR observations of snow: implications for selection of ENVISAT ASAR modes

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Pages 3839-3854 | Received 28 Apr 1998, Accepted 04 Jul 2002, Published online: 13 May 2010
 

Abstract

Snow cover has a substantial impact on processes involved in the interaction between atmosphere and surface, and the knowledge of snow parameters is important in both climatology and weather forecasting. With the upcoming launch of Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar (ASAR) instruments on Envisat, enhanced snow-mapping capabilities are foreseen. In this paper fully polarimetric C- and L-band airborne SAR data, ERS SAR and auxiliary data from various snow conditions in mountainous areas are analysed in order to determine the optimum ASAR modes for snow monitoring. The data used in this study are from the Norwegian part of the snow and ice experiment within the European Multi-sensor Airborne Campaign (EMAC'95) acquired in the Kongsfjellet area, located in Norway, 66° N, 14° E. Fully polarimetric C- and L-band SAR data from ElectroMagnetic Institute SAR (EMISAR), an airborne instrument operated by the Danish Center for Remote Sensing (DCR), were acquired in March, May, and July 1995. In addition, several ERS SAR, airborne photos, field and auxiliary data were acquired.

A larger separation between wet snow and bare ground in EMISAR C-VV polarisation data was found at high incidence angle (55°) compared to lower incidence angle (45°). Cross-polarized observations from bare ground, dry and wet snow in the incidence angle range 35° to 65° are below the specified Envisat ASAR noise floor of –20–22 dB. The backscattering angular dependency for wet snow and bare ground derived from EMISAR C-VV and ERS SAR data corresponds well, and agrees to some extent with volume and surface scattering model results. The C-band is more sensitive to variation in snow properties than the L-band.

Acknowledgments

Part of this work was carried out within SNOW TOOLS, an Environment and Climate project funded by the Commission of the European Community Contract no. ENV4-CT96-0304, Norwegian research Council, ENFO, Statkraft and Norwegian Water and Energy administration. Many thanks to all members of the field team at Kongsfjellet. The EMISAR data have been acquired as part of the Snow and Ice part of the EMAC campaign. Thanks to Inge Lauknes, NORUT IT for geocoding the ERS and EMISAR data.

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