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Airborne surveys of snow depth over Arctic sea ice

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AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2011JC007371

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  1. NASA
  2. NSF

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During the spring of 2009, an ultrawideband microwave radar was deployed as part of Operation IceBridge to provide the first cross-basin surveys of snow thickness over Arctic sea ice. In this paper, we analyze data from three similar to 2000 km transects to examine detection issues, the limitations of the current instrument, and the regional variability of the retrieved snow depth. Snow depth is the vertical distance between the air-snow and snow-ice interfaces detected in the radar echograms. Under ideal conditions, the per echogram uncertainty in snow depth retrieval is similar to 4-5 cm. The finite range resolution of the radar (similar to 5 cm) and the relative amplitude of backscatter from the two interfaces limit the direct retrieval of snow depths much below similar to 8 cm. Well-defined interfaces are observed over only relatively smooth surfaces within the radar footprint of similar to 6.5 m. Sampling is thus restricted to undeformed, level ice. In early April, mean snow depths are 28.5 +/- 16.6 cm and 41.0 +/- 22.2 cm over first-year and multiyear sea ice (MYI), respectively. Regionally, snow thickness is thinner and quite uniform over the large expanse of seasonal ice in the Beaufort Sea, and gets progressively thicker toward the MYI cover north of Ellesmere Island, Greenland, and the Fram Strait. Snow depth over MYI is comparable to that reported in the climatology by Warren et al. (1999). Ongoing improvements to the radar system and the utility of these snow depth measurements are discussed.

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