4.6 Article

Analysis of fine-scale dynamics of the Drygalski ice tongue in Antarctica using satellite SAR data

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF REMOTE SENSING
Volume 43, Issue 7, Pages 2602-2619

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/01431161.2022.2064199

Keywords

Drygalski ice tongue; Antarctica; SAR; Sentinel-1; ice edge extraction; surface velocity

Funding

  1. Italian National Program for Research in Antarctica (PNRA) [PNRA_00298]
  2. European Space Agency (ESA) under the ESA-MOST (Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology) Dragon-5 cooperation project 'Monitoring hArsh Coastal environments and Ocean Surveillance using radar remote sensing' (MAC-OS) [57979]

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This study analyzed the time variability of the Drygalski ice tongue in Antarctica using satellite synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images. A time series of SAR imagery was used to extract the boundary between the ice tongue and the surrounding sea water, and feature tracking was employed to analyze its morphological evolution. The results showed a relatively stable motion trend of the ice tongue.
This study focused on the analysis of the time variability of the morphology of the Drygalski ice tongue (DIT), Antarctica, using - for the first time - satellite synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images. A time series of Sentinel-1 interferometric wide swath SAR imagery collected from 2016 to 2021 is considered and an unsupervised methodology, based on a global threshold constant false alarm rate approach, is used to extract the boundary between the DIT and the surrounding ice-free/ice-infested sea water. The most prominent rifts/fractures identified on the extracted profiles and the ice front are selected to analyse the DIT time variability. The feature tracking allows deriving information on the morphological evolution of the DIT, including the annual displacement and average surface velocity. Experimental results show that the DIT ice front calls for a relatively stable motion trend towards the sea with an average surface velocity of about 670 m per year. Our outcomes show a fairly good agreement with similar studies appeared in the scientific literature, which are mostly based on optical imagery.

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