Abstract

Arctic amplification has many impacts on sea-ice extent, thickness, and flux. It becomes critical to monitor sea-ice conditions at finer spatio-temporal resolution. We used a simple convolutional neural network (CNN) on the RADARSAT-2 dual-polarized ScanSAR wide archive available over Coronation Gulf, Canada, to assess which SAR parameter improves model performances to classify sea ice from water on a large volume of data covering 11 years of ice and surface water conditions. An overall accuracy of 90.1% was achieved on 989 scenes of 100% ice cover or ice-free conditions. An accuracy of 86.3% was achieved on the last year of data (134 scenes) which was kept out of the training process to test the model on an independent dataset. A better accuracy is obtained at lower incidence angles and the HH polarization provides the most information to classify ice from water. To achieve the best accuracy, the incidence angle and the noise equivalent sigma-nought had to be included as input to the model. A comparison done with the ASI passive microwave product shows similar errors in total sea ice concentration when using the Canadian Ice Service regional charts as reference. Nonetheless, errors from both datasets differ and the CNN outputs show greater potential to reduce masked areas, given the better spatial resolution, enabling data classification closer to land and identify features not captured by the ASI dataset.

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