4.7 Article

Wideband Backscattering From Alpine Snow Cover: A Full-Season Study

出版社

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TGRS.2021.3112772

关键词

Snow; Backscatter; Microwave measurement; Microwave radiometry; Remote sensing; L-band; Microwave theory and techniques; Alpine snow cover; backscattering; microwave remote sensing; snow water equivalent (SWE)

资金

  1. European Space Agency through the SnowLab-NG Project [4000130865/20/NL/FF/AN]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [200020_182049]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This article experimentally investigates the relationships between snow-ground state parameters and copol backscattering at a wide range of frequencies, finding an anticorrelation between snow wetness and backscattering coefficient. It assesses the relative strengths of the snow-ground system's primary scattering elements and how snow-ground SPs influence backscattering at different time scales. The study emphasizes the importance of multifrequency active microwave measurements for developing retrieval algorithms and understanding ongoing physical processes.
This article experimentally investigates relationships between copol backscattering at a wide range of frequencies (L- to Ka-bands) and snow-ground state parameters (SPs) in different evolution phases during the full winter cycle of 2019/2020. Backscattering coefficients from 1 to 40 GHz, in situ snow-ground SPs, and meteorological data are measured at the Davos-Laret Remote Sensing Field Laboratory (Switzerland). Relative strengths of the snow-ground system's three primary scattering elements (air-snow interface, snow volume, and snow-ground interface) on backscattering are assessed. An anticorrelation between reasonably high snow wetness and backscattering coefficient is found, especially at higher microwave frequencies. For small amounts of snow wetness, backscatter coefficients at L- and S-bands are intensified via increasing snow volume and snow surface scattering. Snow-ground SPs influence backscattering according to their characteristic time scales of temporal evolution. Under dry snow conditions and at low and intermediate frequencies, ground permittivity is the major influencer of backscatter at a time scale of roughly two weeks. Snowfall is the major influencer of backscatter at a time scale of a few hours to a few days. The findings of this article are valuable to the development of retrieval algorithms using machine learning while maintaining a grasp on the ongoing physical processes. Another key message is that multifrequency active microwave measurements are critical to maximize the number of retrievable SPs and their estimation accuracy. For example, while Ka-band performs well in the detection of snow cover, L-band measurements are more responsive to changes of snow water equivalent (SWE) under moist or wet snow conditions.

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