Radar remote sensing is a well-established method to discriminate lakes retaining liquid-phase water beneath winter ice cover from those that do not. L-band (23.6 cm wavelength) airborne radar showed great promise in the 1970s, but spaceborne synthetic aperture radar (SAR) studies have focused on C-band (5.6 cm) SAR to classify lake ice with no further attention to L-band SAR for this purpose. Here, we examined calibrated L-band single- and quadrature-polarized SAR returns from floating and grounded lake ice in two regions of Alaska: the northern Seward Peninsula (NSP) where methane ebullition is common in lakes and the Arctic Coastal Plain (ACP) where ebullition is relatively rare. We found average backscatter intensities of −13 dB and −16...
Shallow lakes, with depths less than ca. 3.5–4 m, are a ubiquitous feature of the Arctic Alaskan Coa...
Large fractions (15-40%) of the arctic and subarctic land surface are covered by lakes and rivers, e...
Shallow lakes are common across the entire Arctic. They play an important role as methane sources an...
This paper describes the C- and L-band backscattering variations and the development of a numerical ...
Regions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery of lake ice ...
Regions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery of lake ice ...
AbstractDifferentiating between first-year ice (FYI) and multi-year ice (MYI) in C-band synthetic ap...
Utilizing synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data to understand and map sea ice roughness is an active a...
International audienceRegions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR...
International audienceRegions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR...
International audienceRegions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR...
International audienceRegions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR...
Shallow lakes, with depths less than <i>ca</i>. 3.5–4 m, are a ubiquitous feature of the Arctic Alas...
Shallow lakes, with depths less than ca. 3.5–4 m, are a ubiquitous feature of the Arctic Alaskan Coa...
Shallow lakes, with depths less than ca. 3.5–4 m, are a ubiquitous feature of the Arctic Alaskan Coa...
Shallow lakes, with depths less than ca. 3.5–4 m, are a ubiquitous feature of the Arctic Alaskan Coa...
Large fractions (15-40%) of the arctic and subarctic land surface are covered by lakes and rivers, e...
Shallow lakes are common across the entire Arctic. They play an important role as methane sources an...
This paper describes the C- and L-band backscattering variations and the development of a numerical ...
Regions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery of lake ice ...
Regions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery of lake ice ...
AbstractDifferentiating between first-year ice (FYI) and multi-year ice (MYI) in C-band synthetic ap...
Utilizing synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data to understand and map sea ice roughness is an active a...
International audienceRegions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR...
International audienceRegions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR...
International audienceRegions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR...
International audienceRegions of anomalously low backscatter in C-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR...
Shallow lakes, with depths less than <i>ca</i>. 3.5–4 m, are a ubiquitous feature of the Arctic Alas...
Shallow lakes, with depths less than ca. 3.5–4 m, are a ubiquitous feature of the Arctic Alaskan Coa...
Shallow lakes, with depths less than ca. 3.5–4 m, are a ubiquitous feature of the Arctic Alaskan Coa...
Shallow lakes, with depths less than ca. 3.5–4 m, are a ubiquitous feature of the Arctic Alaskan Coa...
Large fractions (15-40%) of the arctic and subarctic land surface are covered by lakes and rivers, e...
Shallow lakes are common across the entire Arctic. They play an important role as methane sources an...