Radar image interpretation techniques applied to sea ice geophysical problems
Abstract
The geophysical science problems in the sea ice area which at present concern understanding the ice budget, where ice is formed, how thick it grows and where it melts, and the processes which control the interaction of air-sea and ice at the ice margins is discussed. The science problems relate to basic questions of sea ice: how much is there, thickness, drift rate, production rate, determination of the morphology of the ice margin, storms feeling for the ice, storms and influence at the margin to alter the pack, and ocean response to a storm at the margin. Some of these questions are descriptive and some require complex modeling of interactions between the ice, the ocean, the atmosphere and the radiation fields. All involve measurements of the character of the ice pack, and SAR plays a significant role in the measurements.
- Publication:
-
Spaceborne Imaging Radar Symposium
- Pub Date:
- July 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983sbir.symp..116C
- Keywords:
-
- Geophysics;
- Ice Formation;
- Photointerpretation;
- Radar Imagery;
- Sea Ice;
- Synthetic Aperture Radar;
- Air Sea Ice Interactions;
- Air Water Interactions;
- Ice Mapping;
- Ice Reporting;
- Ocean Models;
- Communications and Radar