학술논문

Nasa Snowex'17 in SITU Measurements and Ground-Based Remote Sensing
Document Type
Conference
Source
IGARSS 2018 - 2018 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, IGARSS 2018 - 2018 IEEE International. :6266-6268 Jul, 2018
Subject
Aerospace
Computing and Processing
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Geoscience
Photonics and Electrooptics
Signal Processing and Analysis
Remote sensing
NASA
Snow
Radar remote sensing
Forestry
Instruments
snow
passive microwave
radar
lidar
snow water equivalent
Language
ISSN
2153-7003
Abstract
Seasonal snow cover plays a key role in freshwater resources, water security, natural hazards, and weather and climate. However, accurate estimation of snow-water equivalent (SWE) with remote sensing observations remains a significant challenge. NASA Terrestrial Hydrology Program launched its multi-year SnowEx mission whose primary goal is to develop and test techniques for estimating how much water is stored in some complex Earth's terrestrial snow-covered regions (e.g. forested areas). The first year of the 5-year campaign took place in Colorado during the winter 2016–2017, during which in situ measurements and ground-based remote sensing observations were collected by the scientific community. Throughout February 2017, about 100 people were deployed and over 30 remote sensing instruments were used. This required an exceptional coordination effort, which resulted in collocated in situ measurements from snowpits (e.g. profiles of stratigraphy, density, grain size and type, specific surface area, temperature) and along transects (mainly for snow depth measurements) with ground-based remote sensing observations (microwave radiometers, radar, scatterometers, lidars, etc.). The public release of all these datasets has started (nsidc.org/data/snowex).