Abstract
Surface state data derived from spaceborne microwave sensors with suitable temporal sampling are to date only available in low spatial resolution (25-50 km). Current approaches do not adequately resolve spatial heterogeneity in landscape-scale freeze-Thaw processes. We propose to derive a frozen fraction instead of binary freeze-Thaw information. This introduces the possibility to monitor the gradual freezing and thawing of complex landscapes. Frozen fractions were retrieved from Advanced Scatterometer (ASCAT, C-band) backscatter on a 12.5-km grid for three sites in noncontinuous permafrost areas in northern Finland and the Austrian Alps. To calibrate the retrieval approach, frozen fractions based on Sentinel-1 synthetic aperture radar (SAR, C-band) were derived for all sites and compared to ASCAT backscatter. We found strong relationships for ASCAT backscatter with Sentinel-1 derived frozen fractions (Pearson correlations of-0.85 to-0.96) for the sites in northern Finland and less strong relationships for the Alpine site (Pearson correlations-0.579 and-0.611, including and excluding forested areas). Applying the derived linear relationships, predicted frozen fractions using ASCAT backscatter values showed root mean square error (RMSE) values between 7.26% and 16.87% when compared with Sentinel-1 frozen fractions. The validation of the Sentinel-1 derived freeze-Thaw classifications showed high accuracy when compared to in situ near-surface soil temperature (84.7%-94%). Results are discussed with regard to landscape type, differences between spring and autumn, and gridding. This article serves as a proof of concept, showcasing the possibility to derive frozen fraction from coarse spatial resolution scatterometer time series to improve the representation of spatial heterogeneity in landscape-scale surface state.
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Bergstedt, H., Bartsch, A., Neureiter, A., Hofler, A., Widhalm, B., Pepin, N., & Hjort, J. (2020). Deriving a frozen area fraction from metop ascat backscatter based on sentinel-1. IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 58(9), 6008–6019. https://doi.org/10.1109/TGRS.2020.2967364
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