Modeling of Subsurface Scattering from Ice Sheets for Pol-InSAR Applications

Remote sensing is a fundamental tool to measure the dynamics of ice sheets and provides valuable information for ice sheet projections under a changing climate. There is, however, the potential to further reduce the uncertainties in these projections by developing innovative remote sensing methods....

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Main Author: Fischer, Georg
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/81817/
https://elib.dlr.de/81817/1/PhD_Thesis_Georg_Fischer_190220.pdf
https://www.research-collection.ethz.ch/handle/20.500.11850/400515
id ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:81817
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection German Aerospace Center: elib - DLR electronic library
op_collection_id ftdlr
language English
topic Radarkonzepte
spellingShingle Radarkonzepte
Fischer, Georg
Modeling of Subsurface Scattering from Ice Sheets for Pol-InSAR Applications
topic_facet Radarkonzepte
description Remote sensing is a fundamental tool to measure the dynamics of ice sheets and provides valuable information for ice sheet projections under a changing climate. There is, however, the potential to further reduce the uncertainties in these projections by developing innovative remote sensing methods. One of these remote sensing techniques, the polarimetric synthetic aperture radar interferometry (Pol-InSAR), is known since decades to have the potential to assess the geophysical properties below the surface of ice sheets, because of the penetration of microwave signals into dry snow, firn, and ice. Despite this, only very few studies have addressed this topic and the development of robust Pol-InSAR applications is at an early stage. Two potential Pol-InSAR applications are identified as the motivation for this thesis. First, the estimation and compensation of the penetration bias in digital elevation models derived with SAR interferometry. This bias can lead to errors of several meters or even tens of meters in surface elevation measurements. Second, the estimation of geophysical properties of the subsurface of glaciers and ice sheets using Pol-InSAR techniques. There is indeed potential to derive information about melt-refreeze processes within the firn, which are related to density and affect the mass balance. Such Pol-InSAR applications can be a valuable information source with the potential for monthly ice sheet wide coverage and high spatial resolution provided by the next generation of SAR satellites. However, the required models to link the Pol-InSAR measurements to the subsurface properties are not yet established. The aim of this thesis is to improve the modeling of the vertical backscattering distribution in the subsurface of ice sheets and its effect on polarimetric interferometric SAR measurements at different frequencies. In order to achieve this, polarimetric interferometric multi-baseline SAR data at different frequencies and from two different test sites on the Greenland ice sheet are investigated. This thesis contributes with three concepts to a better understanding and to a more accurate modeling of the vertical backscattering distribution in the subsurface of ice sheets. First, the integration of scattering from distinct subsurface layers. These are formed by refrozen melt water in the upper percolation zone and cause an interesting coherence undulation pattern, which cannot be explained with previously existing models. This represents a first link between Pol-InSAR data and geophysical subsurface properties. The second step is the improved modeling of the general vertical backscattering distribution of the subsurface volume. The advantages of more flexible volume models are demonstrated, but interestingly, the simple modification of a previously existing model with a vertical shift parameter lead to the best agreement between model and data. The third contribution is the model based compensation of the penetration bias, which is experimentally validated. At the investigated test sites, it becomes evident that the model based estimates of the surface elevations are more accurate than the interferometric phase center locations, which are conventionally used to derive surface elevations of ice sheets. This thesis therefore improves the state of the art of subsurface scattering modeling for Pol-InSAR applications, demonstrates the model-based penetration bias compensation, and makes a further research step towards the retrieval of geophysical subsurface information with Pol-InSAR.
format Thesis
author Fischer, Georg
author_facet Fischer, Georg
author_sort Fischer, Georg
title Modeling of Subsurface Scattering from Ice Sheets for Pol-InSAR Applications
title_short Modeling of Subsurface Scattering from Ice Sheets for Pol-InSAR Applications
title_full Modeling of Subsurface Scattering from Ice Sheets for Pol-InSAR Applications
title_fullStr Modeling of Subsurface Scattering from Ice Sheets for Pol-InSAR Applications
title_full_unstemmed Modeling of Subsurface Scattering from Ice Sheets for Pol-InSAR Applications
title_sort modeling of subsurface scattering from ice sheets for pol-insar applications
publishDate 2020
url https://elib.dlr.de/81817/
https://elib.dlr.de/81817/1/PhD_Thesis_Georg_Fischer_190220.pdf
https://www.research-collection.ethz.ch/handle/20.500.11850/400515
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Greenland
Ice Sheet
op_relation https://elib.dlr.de/81817/1/PhD_Thesis_Georg_Fischer_190220.pdf
Fischer, Georg (2020) Modeling of Subsurface Scattering from Ice Sheets for Pol-InSAR Applications. Dissertation, ETH Zurich.
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spelling ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:81817 2023-05-15T16:30:45+02:00 Modeling of Subsurface Scattering from Ice Sheets for Pol-InSAR Applications Fischer, Georg 2020-02-20 application/pdf https://elib.dlr.de/81817/ https://elib.dlr.de/81817/1/PhD_Thesis_Georg_Fischer_190220.pdf https://www.research-collection.ethz.ch/handle/20.500.11850/400515 en eng https://elib.dlr.de/81817/1/PhD_Thesis_Georg_Fischer_190220.pdf Fischer, Georg (2020) Modeling of Subsurface Scattering from Ice Sheets for Pol-InSAR Applications. Dissertation, ETH Zurich. Radarkonzepte Hochschulschrift PeerReviewed 2020 ftdlr 2020-02-23T23:57:09Z Remote sensing is a fundamental tool to measure the dynamics of ice sheets and provides valuable information for ice sheet projections under a changing climate. There is, however, the potential to further reduce the uncertainties in these projections by developing innovative remote sensing methods. One of these remote sensing techniques, the polarimetric synthetic aperture radar interferometry (Pol-InSAR), is known since decades to have the potential to assess the geophysical properties below the surface of ice sheets, because of the penetration of microwave signals into dry snow, firn, and ice. Despite this, only very few studies have addressed this topic and the development of robust Pol-InSAR applications is at an early stage. Two potential Pol-InSAR applications are identified as the motivation for this thesis. First, the estimation and compensation of the penetration bias in digital elevation models derived with SAR interferometry. This bias can lead to errors of several meters or even tens of meters in surface elevation measurements. Second, the estimation of geophysical properties of the subsurface of glaciers and ice sheets using Pol-InSAR techniques. There is indeed potential to derive information about melt-refreeze processes within the firn, which are related to density and affect the mass balance. Such Pol-InSAR applications can be a valuable information source with the potential for monthly ice sheet wide coverage and high spatial resolution provided by the next generation of SAR satellites. However, the required models to link the Pol-InSAR measurements to the subsurface properties are not yet established. The aim of this thesis is to improve the modeling of the vertical backscattering distribution in the subsurface of ice sheets and its effect on polarimetric interferometric SAR measurements at different frequencies. In order to achieve this, polarimetric interferometric multi-baseline SAR data at different frequencies and from two different test sites on the Greenland ice sheet are investigated. This thesis contributes with three concepts to a better understanding and to a more accurate modeling of the vertical backscattering distribution in the subsurface of ice sheets. First, the integration of scattering from distinct subsurface layers. These are formed by refrozen melt water in the upper percolation zone and cause an interesting coherence undulation pattern, which cannot be explained with previously existing models. This represents a first link between Pol-InSAR data and geophysical subsurface properties. The second step is the improved modeling of the general vertical backscattering distribution of the subsurface volume. The advantages of more flexible volume models are demonstrated, but interestingly, the simple modification of a previously existing model with a vertical shift parameter lead to the best agreement between model and data. The third contribution is the model based compensation of the penetration bias, which is experimentally validated. At the investigated test sites, it becomes evident that the model based estimates of the surface elevations are more accurate than the interferometric phase center locations, which are conventionally used to derive surface elevations of ice sheets. This thesis therefore improves the state of the art of subsurface scattering modeling for Pol-InSAR applications, demonstrates the model-based penetration bias compensation, and makes a further research step towards the retrieval of geophysical subsurface information with Pol-InSAR. Thesis Greenland Ice Sheet German Aerospace Center: elib - DLR electronic library Greenland