Abstract

Lake ice thickness is a sensitive indicator of climate change largely through its dependency on near-surface air temperature and on-ice snow mass (depth and density). Monitoring of the seasonal variations and trends in ice thickness is also important for the operation of winter ice roads that northern communities rely on for the movement of goods as well as for cultural and leisure activities (e.g., snowmobiling). Therefore, consistent measurements of ice thickness over lakes is important; however, field measurements tend to be sparse in both space and time in many northern countries. Here, we present an application of L-band frequency Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) Interferometric Reflectometry (GNSS-IR) for the estimation of lake ice thickness. The proof of concept is demonstrated through the analysis of Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) time series extracted from Global Positioning System (GPS) constellation L1 band raw data acquired between 8 and 22 March (2017 and 2019) at 14 lake ice sites located in the Northwest Territories, Canada. Dominant frequencies are extracted using Least Squares Harmonic Estimation (LS-HE) for the retrieval of ice thickness. Estimates compare favorably with in-situ measurements (mean absolute error = 0.05 m, mean bias error = −0.01 m, and root mean square error = 0.07 m). These results point to the potential of GPS/GNSS-IR as a complementary tool to traditional field measurements for obtaining consistent ice thickness estimates at many lake locations, given the relatively low cost of GNSS antennas/receivers.

Highlights

  • Lake ice is a significant landscape feature in the winter season at northern latitudes and plays a key role in climate moderation and the energy balance [1]

  • Ground-based radar systems such as Frequency-Modulated Continuous-Wave (FM-CW) radar have proven effective for obtaining ice thickness at X- and Ku-band [5]

  • While satellite retrievals of ice thickness from passive microwave and radar altimetry missions can provide reasonable estimates, these methods are limited to larger lakes due to the low spatial resolution of the associated sensors [6,7]

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Summary

Introduction

Lake ice is a significant landscape feature in the winter season at northern latitudes and plays a key role in climate moderation and the energy balance [1]. Ground-based radar systems such as Frequency-Modulated Continuous-Wave (FM-CW) radar have proven effective for obtaining ice thickness at X- and Ku-band [5]. These systems are pricey to both acquire (e.g., tens to hundreds of thousands of dollars) and deploy at multiple locations. The potential of GNSS-IR for sea ice detection [10] and ice thickness estimation [11,12] has been explored, there has been no direct field application for measurements over ice cover at multiple lake sites. Ice thickness retrievals are shown to be in good agreement with in-situ measurements

Ice Thickness Retrieval from SNR
14 March 2019
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