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Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimetry over Antarctica

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Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimetry over Antarctica. / McMillan, Malcolm; Muir, Alan; Shepherd, Andrew et al.
In: Cryosphere, Vol. 13, No. 2, 01.03.2019, p. 709-722.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

McMillan, M, Muir, A, Shepherd, A, Escola, R, Roca, M, Aublanc, J, Thibaud, P, Restano, M, Ambrozio, A & Benveniste, J 2019, 'Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimetry over Antarctica', Cryosphere, vol. 13, no. 2, pp. 709-722. https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-13-709-2019

APA

McMillan, M., Muir, A., Shepherd, A., Escola, R., Roca, M., Aublanc, J., Thibaud, P., Restano, M., Ambrozio, A., & Benveniste, J. (2019). Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimetry over Antarctica. Cryosphere, 13(2), 709-722. https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-13-709-2019

Vancouver

McMillan M, Muir A, Shepherd A, Escola R, Roca M, Aublanc J et al. Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimetry over Antarctica. Cryosphere. 2019 Mar 1;13(2):709-722. doi: 10.5194/tc-13-709-2019

Author

McMillan, Malcolm ; Muir, Alan ; Shepherd, Andrew et al. / Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimetry over Antarctica. In: Cryosphere. 2019 ; Vol. 13, No. 2. pp. 709-722.

Bibtex

@article{3a945125cc534c51a953575f4756b9ba,
title = "Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimetry over Antarctica",
abstract = "The launch of Sentinel-3A in February 2016 represented the beginning of a new long-term series of operational satellite radar altimeters, which will provide Delay-Doppler altimetry measurements over ice sheets for decades to come. Given the potential benefits that these satellites can offer to a range of glaciological applications, it is important to establish their capacity to monitor ice sheet elevation and elevation change. Here, we present the first analysis of Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimetry over the Antarctic ice sheet, and assess the accuracy and precision of retrievals of ice sheet elevation across a range of topographic regimes. Over the low-slope regions of the ice sheet interior, we find that the instrument achieves both an accuracy and a precision of the order of 10 cm, with ∼98 % of the data validated being within 50 cm of co-located airborne measurements. Across the steeper and more complex topography of the ice sheet margin, the accuracy decreases, although analysis at two coastal sites with densely surveyed airborne campaigns shows that ∼60 %–85 % of validated data are still within 1 m of co-located airborne elevation measurements. We then explore the utility of the Sentinel-3A Delay-Doppler altimeter for mapping ice sheet elevation change. We show that with only 2 years of available data, it is possible to resolve known signals of ice dynamic imbalance and to detect evidence of subglacial lake drainage activity. Our analysis demonstrates a new, long-term source of measurements of ice sheet elevation and elevation change, and the early potential of this operational system for monitoring ice sheet imbalance for decades to come.",
author = "Malcolm McMillan and Alan Muir and Andrew Shepherd and Roger Escola and Monica Roca and Jeremie Aublanc and Pierre Thibaud and Marco Restano and Americo Ambrozio and Jerome Benveniste",
year = "2019",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.5194/tc-13-709-2019",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "709--722",
journal = "Cryosphere",
issn = "1994-0416",
publisher = "Copernicus Gesellschaft mbH",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimetry over Antarctica

AU - McMillan, Malcolm

AU - Muir, Alan

AU - Shepherd, Andrew

AU - Escola, Roger

AU - Roca, Monica

AU - Aublanc, Jeremie

AU - Thibaud, Pierre

AU - Restano, Marco

AU - Ambrozio, Americo

AU - Benveniste, Jerome

PY - 2019/3/1

Y1 - 2019/3/1

N2 - The launch of Sentinel-3A in February 2016 represented the beginning of a new long-term series of operational satellite radar altimeters, which will provide Delay-Doppler altimetry measurements over ice sheets for decades to come. Given the potential benefits that these satellites can offer to a range of glaciological applications, it is important to establish their capacity to monitor ice sheet elevation and elevation change. Here, we present the first analysis of Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimetry over the Antarctic ice sheet, and assess the accuracy and precision of retrievals of ice sheet elevation across a range of topographic regimes. Over the low-slope regions of the ice sheet interior, we find that the instrument achieves both an accuracy and a precision of the order of 10 cm, with ∼98 % of the data validated being within 50 cm of co-located airborne measurements. Across the steeper and more complex topography of the ice sheet margin, the accuracy decreases, although analysis at two coastal sites with densely surveyed airborne campaigns shows that ∼60 %–85 % of validated data are still within 1 m of co-located airborne elevation measurements. We then explore the utility of the Sentinel-3A Delay-Doppler altimeter for mapping ice sheet elevation change. We show that with only 2 years of available data, it is possible to resolve known signals of ice dynamic imbalance and to detect evidence of subglacial lake drainage activity. Our analysis demonstrates a new, long-term source of measurements of ice sheet elevation and elevation change, and the early potential of this operational system for monitoring ice sheet imbalance for decades to come.

AB - The launch of Sentinel-3A in February 2016 represented the beginning of a new long-term series of operational satellite radar altimeters, which will provide Delay-Doppler altimetry measurements over ice sheets for decades to come. Given the potential benefits that these satellites can offer to a range of glaciological applications, it is important to establish their capacity to monitor ice sheet elevation and elevation change. Here, we present the first analysis of Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimetry over the Antarctic ice sheet, and assess the accuracy and precision of retrievals of ice sheet elevation across a range of topographic regimes. Over the low-slope regions of the ice sheet interior, we find that the instrument achieves both an accuracy and a precision of the order of 10 cm, with ∼98 % of the data validated being within 50 cm of co-located airborne measurements. Across the steeper and more complex topography of the ice sheet margin, the accuracy decreases, although analysis at two coastal sites with densely surveyed airborne campaigns shows that ∼60 %–85 % of validated data are still within 1 m of co-located airborne elevation measurements. We then explore the utility of the Sentinel-3A Delay-Doppler altimeter for mapping ice sheet elevation change. We show that with only 2 years of available data, it is possible to resolve known signals of ice dynamic imbalance and to detect evidence of subglacial lake drainage activity. Our analysis demonstrates a new, long-term source of measurements of ice sheet elevation and elevation change, and the early potential of this operational system for monitoring ice sheet imbalance for decades to come.

U2 - 10.5194/tc-13-709-2019

DO - 10.5194/tc-13-709-2019

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 709

EP - 722

JO - Cryosphere

JF - Cryosphere

SN - 1994-0416

IS - 2

ER -