DocumentCode
1334355
Title
Retrieval of wet snow by means of multitemporal SAR data
Author
Nagler, Thomas ; Rott, Helmut
Author_Institution
Inst. of Meteorol. & Geophys., Innsbruck Univ., Austria
Volume
38
Issue
2
fYear
2000
fDate
3/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
754
Lastpage
765
Abstract
An algorithm has been developed for mapping wet snow in mountainous terrain using repeat pass synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images. As a basis for algorithm development, backscattering properties of snow-free and snow-covered alpine surfaces were investigated using ERS SAR data and field measurements at test sites in the Austrian Alps. The incidence angle dependence of backscattering derived from SAR data is compared with simulations for snow-free surfaces and for surfaces covered by dry snow and wet snow. Significant seasonal changes of backscattering are observed, which are mainly caused by variations of the snow liquid water content and of the surface roughness. The importance of surface roughness for backscattering of wet snow is demonstrated by a surface roughness experiment. The algorithm for mapping wet snow applies change detection using ratios of wet snow versus snow-free or dry snow surfaces. The main steps include coregistration, speckle reduction, thresholding of ratio images, geocoding, and, optionally, combination of crossing passes to reduce the loss of information due to layover. A threshold of -3 dB was found to be appropriate for both Radarsat and ERS SAR to separate wet snow from other surfaces. Postprocessing steps, based on historic snow maps or topographic information, are used to correct for dry snow areas at high elevations. Effects of imaging geometry are investigated by comparing ERS SAR images with a look angle of 19° and Radarsat SAR Beam Mode S7 images with a look angle of 40°. The comparison of snow maps from SAR and Landsat-5 Thematic Mapper images shows good agreement in areas of closed snow cover, whereas near the snow line/SAR tends to slightly underestimate the snow extent
Keywords
backscatter; geophysical signal processing; hydrological techniques; radar cross-sections; radar imaging; remote sensing by radar; snow; synthetic aperture radar; terrain mapping; Austria; Austrian Alps; algorithm; alpine surface; backscattering; coregistration; hydrology; image sequence; incidence angle; liquid water content; measurement technique; mountainous terrain; multitemporal SAR; radar remote sensing; repeat pass; seasonal change; snow cover; snowcover; snowpack; speckle reduction; surface roughness; synthetic aperture radar; terrain mapping; thresholding; wet snow; Backscatter; Change detection algorithms; Information retrieval; Rough surfaces; Snow; Surface roughness; Surface topography; Synthetic aperture radar; Terrain mapping; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0196-2892
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/36.842004
Filename
842004
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