Publication | Closed Access
Surface-Based Scatterometer Results of Arctic Sea Ice
56
Citations
8
References
1979
Year
Arctic EngineeringEngineeringOceanographyEarth ScienceImaging RadarShorefast Sea IceRadar Signal ProcessingRadar Backscatter MeasurementsSynthetic Aperture RadarSurface-based Scatterometer ResultsGeographyMicrowave Remote SensingRadiation MeasurementSea IceCryosphereRadar ApplicationRadiometryArctic OceanographyRadar ImagingRadarArctic StructureRadar ScatteringRemote SensingCross Polarization
Radar backscatter measurements were made of shorefast sea ice near Point Barrow, AK, in May 1977, with a surface-based FM-CW scatterometer that swept from 1-2 GHz and from 8.5-17.5 GHz. The 1-2 GHz measurements showed that thick first-year and multiyear ice cannot be distinguished at 10-70° incidence angles, but that undeformed sea ice can be discriminated from pressure ridges and lake ice. Results also indicate that frequencies between 8-18 GHz have the ability to discriminate between thick first-year, multiyear, and lake ice. Cross polarization was found to be a better discriminator than like polarization. In addition, at these latter frequencies the differential scattering cross section σ° was found to have an approximately linearly increasing frequency response.
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