Active microwave measurements of artificial sea ice

A 5 m x 15 m outdoor tank of 1.2 m depth was filled with sea water, and polarimetric radar backscatter data were collected at 1.8, 5, and 10 GHz for incidence angles 0 to 60 deg. Observations commenced with open water and continued until 30 cm of sea ice formed. The roughness of the ice surface is i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Onstott, R. G., Gaboury, S. H., Bredow, J., Gogineni, P.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1988
Subjects:
43
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19890009502
Description
Summary:A 5 m x 15 m outdoor tank of 1.2 m depth was filled with sea water, and polarimetric radar backscatter data were collected at 1.8, 5, and 10 GHz for incidence angles 0 to 60 deg. Observations commenced with open water and continued until 30 cm of sea ice formed. The roughness of the ice surface is important in determining the general backscatter level for first-year ice. Experiments were performed to study the change in backscatter with various roughness scales. Effects of freeze and thaw conditions were also examined. Absolute backscatter levels for new to gray ice are small, except for the large, coherent returns at vertical. The backscatter responses of new, gray, rough grey, and desalinated first-year ice at linear polarization are dissimilar. This is confirmed by examining their polarization signatures.