4.7 Article

Radar altimeter waveform simulations in Antarctica with the Snow Microwave Radiative Transfer Model (SMRT)

Journal

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
Volume 263, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2021.112534

Keywords

Antarctic ice sheet; SMRT; Remote sensing; Radar altimetry; Waveform; Modeling; Field measurements

Funding

  1. EAIIST project [ANR-16-CE01-0011]
  2. National Antarctic Research Program (PNRA)
  3. French Research National Agency (Project ANR program) [1-JS56-005-01, ANR14-CE01-0001, ANR-07-VULN-013]
  4. BNP-Paribas Foundation [ESTEC:4000112698/14/NL/LvH, ESTEC:4000126504/19/NL/NA]
  5. Institut Polaire Francais Paul-Emile Victor (IPEV)

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This study introduces an extended Snow Model Radiative Transfer (SMRT) to compute radar waveforms and conducts simulations on the Antarctic ice sheet. The research reveals differences in radar wave penetration depth and waveform characteristics at the same locations in different frequency bands.
Radar altimeters are important tools to monitor the volume of the ice sheets. The penetration of radar waves in the snowpack is a major source of uncertainty to retrieve surface elevation. To correct this effect, a better understanding of the sensitivity of the radar waveforms to snow properties is needed. Here, we present an extension of the Snow Model Radiative Transfer (SMRT) to compute radar waveforms and conduct a series of simulations on the Antarctic ice sheet. SMRT is driven by snow and surface roughness properties measured over a large latitudinal range during two field campaigns on the Antarctic Plateau. These measurements show that the snowpack is rougher, denser, less stratified, warmer, and has smaller snow grains near the coast than on the central Plateau. These simulations are compared to satellite observations in the Ka, Ku, and S bands. SMRT reproduces the observed waveforms well. For all sites and all sensors, the main contribution comes from the surface echo. The echo from snow grains (volume scattering) represents up to 40% of the amplitude of the total waveform power in the Ka band, and less at the lower frequencies. The highest amplitude is observed on the central Plateau due to the combination of higher reflection from the surface, higher scattering by snow grains in the Ka and Ku bands, and higher inter-layer reflections in the S band. In the Ka band, the wave penetrates in the snowpack less deeply on the central Plateau than near the coast because of the strong scattering caused by the larger snow grains. The opposite is observed in the S band, the wave penetrates deeper on the central Plateau because of the lower absorption due to the lower snow temperatures. The elevation bias caused by wave penetration into the snowpack show a constant bias of 10 cm for all sites in the Ka band, and a bias of 11 cm, and 21 cm in the Ku band for sites close to the coast and the central Plateau, respectively. Now that SMRT is performing waveform simulations, further work will address how the snowpack properties affect the parameters retrieved by more advanced retracking algorithms such as ICE-2 for different snow cover surfaces.

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