Ice Deformation from SAR [H. Stern and Moritz, R.]

This is an external link to a Polar Science Center (University of Washington) website that contains data and documentation. The Canadian RADARSAT satellite collected 195 synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images of the SHEBA site November 1, 1997, and October 8, 1998 (roughly one image every 3-5 days)....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Harry Stern, Richard Moritz
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:59ec7ad0-a867-4b1c-8e79-ac4e36338c4a
Description
Summary:This is an external link to a Polar Science Center (University of Washington) website that contains data and documentation. The Canadian RADARSAT satellite collected 195 synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images of the SHEBA site November 1, 1997, and October 8, 1998 (roughly one image every 3-5 days). The C-band (5.3 GHz) RADARSAT SAR imaged a swath on the earth 460 km wide (in ScanSAR mode) with a pixel size of 50 m, unhampered by clouds or darkness. The satellite data were received and processed into imagery at the Alaska SAR Facility (ASF) in Fairbanks. Sequential pairs of images were then processed by the RADARSAT Geophysical Processor System (RGPS) at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena to derive the motion of the sea ice on a 5-km grid by tracking common features in each pair of images. Thus we have a year-long record of the spatial pattern of ice motion and the radar backscatter in the vicinity of the SHEBA site. Ice deformation (divergence, shear) and ice vorticity are computed from the RGPS ice motion products.