Inhalt des Dokuments
GNSS Reflectometry for Sea Ice Detection
- GNSS-R for sea ice detection
[1]
- © Y. Zhu (GFZ)
Yongchao Zhu
(Erfolgreiche Fertigstellung Dezember 2018)
Fakultät VI - Planen Bauen Umwelt, Technischen Universität
Berlin
School of Geodesy and Geomatics, Wuhan University
GFZ
Potsdam
Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS)
has been widely used to provide positioning, navigation and timing
services in civil and military domains since it became fully
operational in 1993. In addition to these fundamental services and
applications, GNSS could be also used for remote sensing of
atmospheric parameters; for instance, by launching LEO satellites and
observing refraction signals from GNSS satellites with negative
elevation angles. This GNSS-based remote sensing technique termed GNSS
radio occultation (GNSS-RO) could be used to estimate the tropospheric
water vapor, temperature, pressure, and ionospheric total electron
content (TEC) with a high resolution. Meanwhile, GNSS signal
reflection over a specific surface, a source of positioning error,
which cannot be easily neutralized, could be used to retrieve the
surface geophysical parameters. This remote sensing technique is
termed GNSS Reflectometry (GNSS-R). The ocean’s surface
characteristics (ie. ocean surface height, roughness, wind speed and
wind direction) could be estimated by GNSS-R. It could be also applied
for land applications such as the retrieval of ground vegetation
condition and soil moisture. This study focuses on sea ice detection
using GNSS-R. GNSS-R can be used to retrieve main parameters of sea
ice (i.e. thickness, concentration, surface roughness and ice
permittivity). These parameters can be combined to help characterize
different ice types including new ice, young ice, thin first-year ice,
first-year ice, and multiyear ice. Sea ice thickness is a key
parameter for classification and characterization of sea ice masses,
which influence the temperature and circulation pattern of both the
ocean and atmosphere and thus can be used for analyses of the
Earth’s climate. In the first stage, GNSS-R is used for sea ice
coverage detection using UK TechDemoSat-1 data (available online:
www.merrbys.co.uk [2]). A new differential Delay-Doppler Map (DDM) is
proposed and the ice coverage detection result is validated against
data from National Snow & Ice Center, USA (http://nsidc.org [3]).
Then, the study presents a potential sea ice concentration detection
method based on GNSS reflection amplitudes considering sea ice
permittivity and roughness, which are important parameters for sea ice
classification and characterization. The reflection power of cross-
and co-polar signals shall be predicted. For this purpose, the Fresnel
reflection coefficients for representative examples of sea ice, sea
water and snow with circular polarizations at L-band are presented
firstly. The simulated polarimetric ratio for satellites observed at
low elevation angle (10°-30°) is then calculated considering sea ice
permittivity and roughness. The potential use of reflected GNSS
signals for sea ice detection is evaluated through ice concentration
measurements. The results show that reflection power loss increases
with the increase of sea ice concentration. In addition, the elevation
angle has little effect on power gain for low elevation angle 10° -
30°
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hesis-Yongchao_Zhu.pdf