Detecting near-surface melt-water and basal ice-water interfaces by VHF radar sounder data
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Date
2024-07
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IEEE
Abstract
Very high-frequency (VHF) radar sounding from an orbital platform is a promising mission concept for subsurface observations of the Earth’s polar caps for mapping the ice sheets and ice shelves from the surface to the base. Previous feasibility studies have analyzed the detectability of the basal interface, the internal layers and the subglacial lakes in simulated VHF radargrams. However, there are few studies on the detection of near-surface melt-water and the ice-ocean interface, which are important for predicting the stability of the polar ice. This paper both presents a novel semi-supervised basal ice-water detection algorithm and exploits a state-of-the-art dielectric inversion technique to detect surface melt for the analysis of simulated VHF radargrams. Results show that about 90% of the ice-ocean interfaces are correctly detected with the proposed detection algorithm and that the dielectric inversion revealed a pool of melt-water in the Antarctic peninsula.
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Keywords
Civil engineering, Radar sounder, Surface melt-water, Grounding zone, Cryosphere, Remote sensing