Abstract

Here we analyze ice conditions in the Southeastern Baltic (SEB) Sea and in the Curonian Lagoon (CL) using spaceborne synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data combined with in-situ measurements from coastal stations during four winter seasons between 2009–2013. As shown, the ice conditions in the SEB and in the CL are strongly varying from year to year and do not always correlate with each other. In the SEB, ice cover may form only within 5–15 km band along the coast or spread up to 100 km offshore covering almost the entire region. The mean ice season duration here is 45 days. The CL is almost fully ice-covered every year apart of its northern part subjected to sea water inflow and active shipping. The ice regime is also more stable here, however, it also possesses multiple periods of partial melting and re-freezing. In this study we also perform a validation of three SAR-based ice thickness products (Envisat ASAR 0.5-km and 1-km, and RADARSAT-2 0.5-km) produced by the Finnish Meteorological Institute versus in-situ measurements in the CL. As shown, all satellite products perform rather well for the periods of gradual ice thickness growth. When the ice thickness grows rapidly, all products underestimate the observed values by 10–20 cm (20–50%). The best results were obtained for the RADARSAT-2 ice thickness product with the highest R2 value (0.68) and the root mean square error around 8 cm. The results of the study clearly show that multi-mission SAR data are very useful for spatial and temporal analysis of the ice regime in coastal waters and semi-enclosed shallow water bodies where the number of field observations is insufficient or lacking.

Highlights

  • Every year the Baltic Sea is partially covered by ice

  • This study provides no information about the ice conditions in the adjacent coastal area of the SE Baltic Sea

  • Analysis of synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data for the Southeastern Baltic Sea and the Curonian Lagoon shows that their ice regime is strongly varying from year to year

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Summary

Introduction

Every year the Baltic Sea is partially covered by ice. Normally, the ice formation begins to the north of the Bothnian Bay and east of the Gulf of Finland. Ice covers the Bothnian Sea, the Archipelago Sea, the Gulf of Finland and the Gulf of Riga, as well as the northern part of the Baltic proper. The Danish Straits and the southern Baltic Proper are covered with ice [1]. The timing of the maximum ice cover extent can vary from 31 January (in 1990) up to 30 March (in 1994), while the highest ice thickness is usually found in the northern part of the Bothnian Bay (about 70 cm) [4]

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