Title :
A New Methodology for Detecting Ice Sheet Surface Elevation Changes From Laser Altimetry Data
Author :
Schenk, Tony ; Csathó, Beáta
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Geol. Sci., Univ. at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA
Abstract :
The integrated program Surface Elevation Reconstruction And Change detection (SERAC) was specifically designed and developed for detecting surface elevation and elevation changes from the Ice Cloud and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat). ICESat carried geoscience laser altimeter system (GLAS) with the primary goal of measuring elevation changes of the polar ice sheets to sufficient accuracy to assess their impact on global sea level. GLAS had three lasers that operated sequentially, with two to three campaigns per year. The footprint size was about 70 m and the point-to-point spacing between neighboring laser points reached 170 m. SERAC copes with different scenarios. Originally developed for calculating surface elevation changes of crossover areas, it was extended to along-track areas and the inclusion of non-ICESat laser data, such as Airborne Topographic Mapper (ATM), an airborne laser scanning system developed by NASA Wallops Flight Facility. The adjustment system of SERAC simultaneously computes the shape of surface patches containing laser points of the same time epoch, estimates surface elevation changes, and approximates the time series of elevation changes by a polynomial after removing the seasonal cycle. Results shown in the second part of the paper demonstrate the potential of SERAC for calculating detailed ice sheet elevation and volume change histories. Greenland Ice Sheet volume changes, calculated from a combined ICESat/ATM data set, show good agreement with previously published results and provide improved sampling in the rapidly thinning coastal regions of southern Greenland. Moreover, the polynomial approximation of the time series of surface elevation changes is taken to advantage in the last example of Northwest Greenland, illuminating the intricate thinning/thickening patterns that often vary considerably over short spatial scales.
Keywords :
altimeters; oceanographic techniques; optical scanners; sea ice; time series; ICESat/ATM data set; Ice Cloud and land Elevation Satellite; NASA Wallops Flight Facility; Northwest Greenland; SERAC; airborne laser scanning system; airborne topographic mapper; coastal regions; geoscience laser altimeter system; global sea level; ice sheet elevation; ice sheet surface elevation detection; laser altimetry data; nonICESat laser data; polar ice sheets; polynomial approximation; seasonal cycle; southern Greenland; surface elevation change estimation; surface elevation reconstruction and change detection; surface elevation time series; time series; Ice; Mathematical model; Polynomials; Sea surface; Surface emitting lasers; Surface topography; Change detection; Ice Cloud and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat); ice dynamics; ice sheets; laser altimetry; multisensor;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2011.2182357