Airborne Snow Measurements Over Alaska Mountains and Glaciers With A Compact FMCW Radar

2019
Snow in mountainous areas provides freshwater resources for lower basins and coastal areas. Snow layering at mountain summits contains information about local seasonal snow accumulation and climate history. Knowledge of snow depths is required to estimate the snow water equivalent. However, monitoring spatial distribution and temporal changes in snow depth and accumulation over remote mountains and glaciers in wide areas is challenging because of limited accessibility for in-situ measurements. As a part of NASA Operation IceBridge missions, we took airborne radar measurements of snow over Alaskan mountains, icefields and glaciers in late May of 2018, with a compact frequency-modulated continuous wave radar system, operating from 2 GHz to 8 GHz and installed on a Single Otter aircraft. In this paper, we describe the radar instrument, its installation onto the platform, the data collection and processing activities, and report the major results from these surveys. We observed seasonal snow depth between ~0.3 m to ~15 m for elevations above sea level from ~1726 m to ~3624 m. We successfully mapped snow accumulation layers to depths exceeding ~85 m below the surface at high-elevation summits of Mount Wrangell and Bona. The traced snow depth profiles over glaciers and accumulation layers at mountain summits point to the utility of these data to the study of water resource management, hydrology modelling, and regional climate change.
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