Title of article :
Radar altimetry measurements over antarctic ice sheet: A focus on antenna polarization and change in backscatter problems Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
F. Remy and O. Kimmoun، نويسنده , , T. Flament، نويسنده , , F. Blarel، نويسنده , , J. Benveniste، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
In this paper, we investigate the impact of the error due to the penetration of the altimetric wave within the snowpack. The phenomenon has two different impacts. The first one, due to temporal change in snow characteristics, affects the ice sheet volume trend as derived from altimetric series. The second one, because of both the anisotropy of the ice sheet surface properties and of the linear antenna polarization, introduces a difference in measurements at crossover points. These two phenomena are the cause of what are probably the most critical limitations to the interpretation of long-term altimetric series in term of mass balance and to the comparison between or data fusion of different missions. Moreover, they will lead to the largest error when comparing data from EnviSat with data from CryoSat, because of the different orbits, or with data from AltiKa, because of the different radar frequencies.We show that waveform distortions due to snow characteristics fluctuation are complex. In the central part of the East Antarctica, the height and the leading edge width fluctuations vary together while elsewhere, height fluctuations may occur with no variations in the waveform shape, mostly during winter. As a consequence, these induced errors cannot be corrected with solely the help of the backscatter: waveform shape parameters are also needed. They are however not enough to fully correct these two errors. We propose an empirical correction for these effects. We show that crossover differences may be significantly reduced to up 22 cm. In terms of volume change, the estimation may vary up to 4 cm/yr at cross-overs depending on the correction used and is reduced in average to 2.3 cm/yr with our correction. The difference between the height trends estimated with both corrections is weak in average but may locally reach 5 cm/yr with a clear geographical pattern.
Keywords :
Altimetry , Antarctica ice sheet , Mass balance , CryoSat , ENVISAT , AltiKa
Journal title :
Advances in Space Research
Journal title :
Advances in Space Research