Monitoring the Terra Nova Bay polynya by MODIS ice surface temperature imagery during winter 2010 and 2011

Polynyas occur in remote, mostly inaccessible, places of the Arctic and Antarctic. Hence, remote sensing is essential for monitoring their dynamics. On regional scales, passive microwave (PM) radiometers provide useful information about their extent because they are available on a daily basis and do...

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Main Authors: Giannetta Fusco, Manuela Sansiviero, Giuseppe Aulicino, Stephan Paul, Giorgio Budillon
Other Authors: Fusco, Giannetta, Sansiviero, Manuela, Aulicino, Giuseppe, Paul, Stephan, Budillon, Giorgio
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11566/265474
http://iapso.iugg.org/scientific-assemblies23/79-2017-iapso-iamas-iaga-joint-assembly.html
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftupmarcheiris:oai:iris.univpm.it:11566/265474 2024-01-28T10:00:04+01:00 Monitoring the Terra Nova Bay polynya by MODIS ice surface temperature imagery during winter 2010 and 2011 Giannetta Fusco Manuela Sansiviero Giuseppe Aulicino Stephan Paul Giorgio Budillon Fusco, Giannetta Sansiviero, Manuela Aulicino, Giuseppe Paul, Stephan Budillon, Giorgio 2017 http://hdl.handle.net/11566/265474 http://iapso.iugg.org/scientific-assemblies23/79-2017-iapso-iamas-iaga-joint-assembly.html eng eng ispartofbook:IAPSO 2017 IAPSO/IAMAS/IAGA Joint Assembly - Abstract Book IAPSO 2017 IAPSO/IAMAS/IAGA Joint Assembly - Good Hope for Earth Sciences firstpage:1160 lastpage:1161 numberofpages:2 http://hdl.handle.net/11566/265474 http://iapso.iugg.org/scientific-assemblies23/79-2017-iapso-iamas-iaga-joint-assembly.html polynyas sea ice remote sensing MODIS Terra Nova Bay info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2017 ftupmarcheiris 2024-01-03T17:43:41Z Polynyas occur in remote, mostly inaccessible, places of the Arctic and Antarctic. Hence, remote sensing is essential for monitoring their dynamics. On regional scales, passive microwave (PM) radiometers provide useful information about their extent because they are available on a daily basis and do not depend on daylight and penetrate perfectly through clouds. Nonetheless, the coarse resolution of PM radiometers does not allow an accurate discrimination of open water and thin ice from thick ice. Synthetic radar aperture (SAR) sensors provide a better spatial resolution (up to few tents of meters) but present a lower data acquisition frequency. Despite their sensitivity to the presence of clouds, thermal infrared (TIR) Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometers (MODIS) operate at large swath widths providing high spatial resolution images (typically 1 Km) several times per day. Many studies already demonstrated their usefulness for the retrieval of polynyas size and thin ice thickness. In this study, we deal with MODIS observation of a frequently occurring coastal polynya in the Terra Nova Bay (TNB), located in the western Ross Sea (Antarctica). We examine the TNB polynya evolution during the freezing seasons (April to October) 2010 and 2011 using a new methodology that combines a sequence of MODIS swath-based scenes (level-1b products). Not-informative cloudy scenes have been completely discarded from our analyses Clear-sky and fog-contaminated scenes have been analysed in order to extract the polynya area, thus having a revisit time of few hours in absence of thick clouds. Results have been validated through the comparison with a huge set of ENVISAT ASAR images. The good agreement with high resolution ASAR information demonstrated the potential of this tool for the continuous monitoring of the polynya extent. A comparison with TNB polynya extent estimations retrieved by other MODIS and PM based tools has also been carried out for freezing season 2010 and 2011, and differences discussed. Finally, wind ... Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Arctic Ross Sea Sea ice Università Politecnica delle Marche: IRIS Antarctic Arctic Asar ENVELOPE(134.033,134.033,68.667,68.667) Ross Sea Terra Nova Bay
institution Open Polar
collection Università Politecnica delle Marche: IRIS
op_collection_id ftupmarcheiris
language English
topic polynyas
sea ice
remote sensing
MODIS
Terra Nova Bay
spellingShingle polynyas
sea ice
remote sensing
MODIS
Terra Nova Bay
Giannetta Fusco
Manuela Sansiviero
Giuseppe Aulicino
Stephan Paul
Giorgio Budillon
Monitoring the Terra Nova Bay polynya by MODIS ice surface temperature imagery during winter 2010 and 2011
topic_facet polynyas
sea ice
remote sensing
MODIS
Terra Nova Bay
description Polynyas occur in remote, mostly inaccessible, places of the Arctic and Antarctic. Hence, remote sensing is essential for monitoring their dynamics. On regional scales, passive microwave (PM) radiometers provide useful information about their extent because they are available on a daily basis and do not depend on daylight and penetrate perfectly through clouds. Nonetheless, the coarse resolution of PM radiometers does not allow an accurate discrimination of open water and thin ice from thick ice. Synthetic radar aperture (SAR) sensors provide a better spatial resolution (up to few tents of meters) but present a lower data acquisition frequency. Despite their sensitivity to the presence of clouds, thermal infrared (TIR) Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometers (MODIS) operate at large swath widths providing high spatial resolution images (typically 1 Km) several times per day. Many studies already demonstrated their usefulness for the retrieval of polynyas size and thin ice thickness. In this study, we deal with MODIS observation of a frequently occurring coastal polynya in the Terra Nova Bay (TNB), located in the western Ross Sea (Antarctica). We examine the TNB polynya evolution during the freezing seasons (April to October) 2010 and 2011 using a new methodology that combines a sequence of MODIS swath-based scenes (level-1b products). Not-informative cloudy scenes have been completely discarded from our analyses Clear-sky and fog-contaminated scenes have been analysed in order to extract the polynya area, thus having a revisit time of few hours in absence of thick clouds. Results have been validated through the comparison with a huge set of ENVISAT ASAR images. The good agreement with high resolution ASAR information demonstrated the potential of this tool for the continuous monitoring of the polynya extent. A comparison with TNB polynya extent estimations retrieved by other MODIS and PM based tools has also been carried out for freezing season 2010 and 2011, and differences discussed. Finally, wind ...
author2 Fusco, Giannetta
Sansiviero, Manuela
Aulicino, Giuseppe
Paul, Stephan
Budillon, Giorgio
format Conference Object
author Giannetta Fusco
Manuela Sansiviero
Giuseppe Aulicino
Stephan Paul
Giorgio Budillon
author_facet Giannetta Fusco
Manuela Sansiviero
Giuseppe Aulicino
Stephan Paul
Giorgio Budillon
author_sort Giannetta Fusco
title Monitoring the Terra Nova Bay polynya by MODIS ice surface temperature imagery during winter 2010 and 2011
title_short Monitoring the Terra Nova Bay polynya by MODIS ice surface temperature imagery during winter 2010 and 2011
title_full Monitoring the Terra Nova Bay polynya by MODIS ice surface temperature imagery during winter 2010 and 2011
title_fullStr Monitoring the Terra Nova Bay polynya by MODIS ice surface temperature imagery during winter 2010 and 2011
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring the Terra Nova Bay polynya by MODIS ice surface temperature imagery during winter 2010 and 2011
title_sort monitoring the terra nova bay polynya by modis ice surface temperature imagery during winter 2010 and 2011
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/11566/265474
http://iapso.iugg.org/scientific-assemblies23/79-2017-iapso-iamas-iaga-joint-assembly.html
long_lat ENVELOPE(134.033,134.033,68.667,68.667)
geographic Antarctic
Arctic
Asar
Ross Sea
Terra Nova Bay
geographic_facet Antarctic
Arctic
Asar
Ross Sea
Terra Nova Bay
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Arctic
Ross Sea
Sea ice
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Arctic
Ross Sea
Sea ice
op_relation ispartofbook:IAPSO 2017 IAPSO/IAMAS/IAGA Joint Assembly - Abstract Book
IAPSO 2017 IAPSO/IAMAS/IAGA Joint Assembly - Good Hope for Earth Sciences
firstpage:1160
lastpage:1161
numberofpages:2
http://hdl.handle.net/11566/265474
http://iapso.iugg.org/scientific-assemblies23/79-2017-iapso-iamas-iaga-joint-assembly.html
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