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Variable penetration depth of interferometric synthetic aperture radar signals on Alaska glaciers: a cold surface layer hypothesis

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Alessio Gusmeroli, Anthony Arendt, Donald Atwood, Bert Kampes, Mark Sanford, and Joanna C Young, 2013-08, Variable penetration depth of interferometric synthetic aperture radar signals on Alaska glaciers: a cold surface layer hypothesis: Annals of Glaciology.

Summary

Abstract: P-band interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) data at 5 m resolution from Kahiltna Glacier, the largest glacier in the Alaska Range, Alaska, USA, show pronounced spatial variation in penetration depth, δ P. We obtained δ P by differencing X- and P-band digital elevation models. δ P varied significantly over the glacier, but it was possible to distinguish representative zones. In the accumulation area, δ P decreased with decreasing elevation from 18±3 m in the percolation zone to 10±4 m in the wet snow zone. In the central portion of the ablation area, a location free of debris and crevasses, we identified a zone of very high δ P (34±4 m) which decreased at lower elevations (23±3 m in bare ice and 5 - 10 m in debris-covered [...]

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  • Alaska CASC
  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers

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citationTypeJournal Article
editionVolume 54 issue 64 pages 218 - 223 September 2013
journalAnnals of Glaciology
parts
typeDOI Number
value doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.3189/2013AoG64A114

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