257 research outputs found

    Monitoring permafrost environments with Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) sensors

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    Permafrost occupies approximately 24% of the exposed land area in the Northern Hemisphere. It is an important element of the cryosphere and has strong impacts on hydrology, biological processes, land surface energy budget, and infrastructure. For several decades, surface air temperatures in the high northern latitudes have warmed at approximately twice the global rate. Permafrost temperatures have increased in most regions since the early 1980s, the averaged warming north of 60°N has been 1-2°C. In-situ measurements are essential to understanding physical processes in permafrost terrain, but they have several limitations, ranging from difficulties in drilling to the representativeness of limited single point measurements. Remote sensing is urgently needed to supplement ground-based measurements and extend the point observations to a broader spatial domain. This thesis concentrates on the sub-arctic permafrost environment monitoring with SAR datasets. The study site is selected in a typical discontinuous permafrost region in the eastern Canadian sub-Arctic. Inuit communities in Nunavik and Nunatsiavut in the Canadian eastern sub-arctic are amongst the groups most affected by the impacts of climate change and permafrost degradation. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) datasets have advantages for permafrost monitoring in the Arctic and sub-arctic regions because of its high resolution and independence of cloud cover and solar illumination. To date, permafrost environment monitoring methods and strategies with SAR datasets are still under development. The variability of active layer thickness is a direct indication of permafrost thermal state changes. The Differential SAR Interferometry (D-InSAR) technique is applied in the study site to derive ground deformation, which is introduced by the thawing/freezing depth of active layer and underlying permafrost. The D-InSAR technique has been used for the mapping of ground surface deformation over large areas by interpreting the phase difference between two signals acquired at different times as ground motion information. It shows the ability to detect freeze/thaw-related ground motion over permafrost regions. However, to date, accuracy and value assessments of D-InSAR applications have focused mostly on the continuous permafrost region where the vegetation is less developed and causes fewer complicating factors for the D-InSAR application, less attention is laid on the discontinuous permafrost terrain. In this thesis, the influencing factors and application conditions for D-InSAR in the discontinuous permafrost environment are evaluated by using X- band and L-band data. Then, benefit from by the high-temporal resolution of C-band Sentinel-1 time series, the seasonal displacement is derived from small baseline subsets (SBAS)-InSAR. Landforms are indicative of permafrost presence, with their changes inferring modifications to permafrost conditions. A permafrost landscape mapping method was developed which uses multi-temporal TerraSAR-X backscatter intensity and interferometric coherence information. The land cover map is generated through the combined use of object-based image analysis (OBIA) and classification and regression tree analysis (CART). An overall accuracy of 98% is achieved when classifying rock and water bodies, and an accuracy of 79% is achieved when discriminating between different vegetation types with one year of single-polarized acquisitions. This classification strategy can be transferred to other time-series SAR datasets, e.g., Sentinel-1, and other heterogeneous environments. One predominant change in the landscape tied to the thaw of permafrost is the dynamics of thermokarst lakes. Dynamics of thermokarst lakes are developed through their lateral extent and vertical depth changes. Due to different water depth, ice cover over shallow thermokarst ponds/lakes can freeze completely to the lake bed in winter, resulting in grounded ice; while ice cover over deep thermokarst ponds/lakes cannot, which have liquid water persisting under the ice cover all winter, resulting in floating ice. Winter ice cover regimes are related to water depths and ice thickness. In the lakes having floating ice, the liquid water induces additional heat in the remaining permafrost underneath and surroundings, which contributes to further intensified permafrost thawing. SAR datasets are utilized to detect winter ice cover regimes based on the character that liquid water has a remarkably high dielectric constant, whereas pure ice has a low value. Patterns in the spatial distribution of ice-cover regimes of thermokarst ponds in a typical discontinuous permafrost region are first revealed. Then, the correlations of these ice-cover regimes with the permafrost degradation states and thermokarst pond development in two historical phases (Sheldrake catchment in the year 1957 and 2009, Tasiapik Valley 1994 and 2010) were explored. The results indicate that the ice-cover regimes of thermokarst ponds are affected by soil texture, permafrost degradation stage and permafrost depth. Permafrost degradation is difficult to directly assess from the coverage area of floating-ice ponds and the percentage of all thermokarst ponds consisting of such floating-ice ponds in a single year. Continuous monitoring of ice-cover regimes and surface areas is recommended to elucidate the hydrological trajectory of the thermokarst process. Several operational monitoring methods have been developed in this thesis work. In the meanwhile, the spatial distribution of seasonal ground thaw subsidence, permafrost landscape, thermokarst ponds and their winter ice cover regimes are first revealed in the study area. The outcomes help understand the state and dynamics of permafrost environment.Der Permafrostboden bedeckt etwa 24% der exponierten LandflĂ€che in der nördlichen HemisphĂ€re. Es ist ein wichtiges Element der KryosphĂ€re und hat starke Auswirkungen auf die Hydrologie, die biologischen Prozesse, das Energie-Budget der LandoberflĂ€che und die Infrastruktur. Seit mehreren Jahrzehnten erhöhen sich die OberflĂ€chenlufttemperaturen in den nördlichen hohen Breitengraden etwa doppelt so stark wie die globale Rate. Die Temperaturen der Permafrostböden sind in den meisten Regionen seit den frĂŒhen 1980er Jahren gestiegen. Die durchschnittliche ErwĂ€rmung nördlich von 60° N betrĂ€gt 1-2°C. In-situ-Messungen sind essentiell fĂŒr das VerstĂ€ndnis der physischen Prozesse im PermafrostgelĂ€nde. Es gibt jedoch mehrere EinschrĂ€nkungen, die von Schwierigkeiten beim Bohren bis hin zur ReprĂ€sentativitĂ€t begrenzter Einzelpunktmessungen reichen. Fernerkundung ist dringend benötigt, um bodenbasierte Messungen zu ergĂ€nzen und punktuelle Beobachtungen auf einen breiteren rĂ€umlichen Bereich auszudehnen. Diese Dissertation konzentriert sich auf die Umweltbeobachtung der subarktischen Permafrostböden mit SAR-DatensĂ€tzen. Das Untersuchungsgebiet wurde in einer typischen diskontinuierlichen Permafrostzone in der kanadischen östlichen Sub-Arktis ausgewĂ€hlt. Die Inuit-Gemeinschaften in den Regionen Nunavik und Nunatsiavut in der kanadischen östlichen Sub-Arktis gehören zu den Gruppen, die am stĂ€rksten von den Auswirkungen des Klimawandels und Permafrostdegradation betroffen sind. Synthetische Apertur Radar (SAR) DatensĂ€tze haben Vorteile fĂŒr das Permafrostmonitoring in den arktischen und subarktischen Regionen aufgrund der hohen Auflösung und der UnabhĂ€ngigkeit von Wolkendeckung und Sonnenstrahlung. Bis heute sind die Methoden und Strategien mit SAR-DatensĂ€tzen fĂŒr Umweltbeobachtung der Permafrostböden noch in der Entwicklung. Die VariabilitĂ€t der Auftautiefe der aktiven Schicht ist eine direkte Indikation der VerĂ€nderung des thermischen Zustands der Permafrostböden. Die Differential-SAR-Interferometrie(D-Insar)-Technik wird im Untersuchungsgebiet zur Ableitung der Bodendeformation, die durch Auftau- / und Gefriertiefe der aktiven Schicht und des unterliegenden Permafrostbodens eingefĂŒhrt wird, eingesetzt. Die D-InSAR-Technik wurde fĂŒr Kartierung der LandoberflĂ€chendeformation ĂŒber große FlĂ€chen verwendet, indem der Phasenunterschied zwischen zwei zu verschiedenen Zeitpunkten als Bodenbewegungsinformation erfassten Signalen interpretiert wurde. Es zeigt die FĂ€higkeit, tau- und gefrierprozessbedingte Bodenbewegungen ĂŒber Permafrostregionen zu detektieren. Jedoch fokussiert sich die Genauigkeit und WertschĂ€tzung der D-InSAR-Anwendung bis heute hauptsĂ€chlich auf kontinuierliche Permafrostregion, wo die Vegetation wenig entwickelt ist und weniger komplizierte Faktoren fĂŒr D-InSAR-Anwendung verursacht. Das diskontinuierliche PermafrostgelĂ€nde wurde nur weniger berĂŒcksichtigt. In dieser Dissertation wurden die Einflussfaktoren und Anwendungsbedingungen fĂŒr D-InSAR im diskontinuierlichen Permafrostgebiet mittels X-Band und L-Band Daten ausgewertet. Dann wurde die saisonale Verschiebung dank der hohen Auflösung der C-Band Sentinel-1 Zeitreihe von „Small Baseline Subsets (SBAS)-InSAR“ abgeleitet. Landformen weisen auf die PrĂ€senz des Permafrosts hin, wobei deren VerĂ€nderungen auf die Modifikation der Permafrostbedingungen schließen. Eine Kartierungsmethode der Permafrostlandschaft wurde entwickelt, dabei wurde Multi-temporal TerraSAR-X RĂŒckstreuungsintensitĂ€t und interferometrische KohĂ€renzinformationen verwendet. Die Landbedeckungskarte wurde durch kombinierte Anwendung objektbasierter Bildanalyse (OBIA) und Klassifikations- und Regressionsbaum Analyse (CART) generiert. Eine Gesamtgenauigkeit in Höhe von 98% wurde bei Klassifikation der Gesteine und Wasserkörper erreicht. Bei Unterscheidung zwischen verschiedenen Vegetationstypen mit einem Jahr einzelpolarisierte Akquisitionen wurde eine Genauigkeit von 79% erreicht. Diese Klassifikationsstrategie kann auf andere Zeitreihen der SAR-DatensĂ€tzen, z.B. Sentinel-1, und auch anderen heterogenen Umwelten ĂŒbertragen werden. Eine vorherrschende VerĂ€nderung in der Landschaft, die mit dem Auftauen des Permafrosts verbunden ist, ist die Dynamik der Thermokarstseen. Die Dynamik der Thermokarstseen ist durch VerĂ€nderungen der seitlichen Ausdehnung und der vertikalen Tiefe entwickelt. Aufgrund der unterschiedlichen Wassertiefen kann die Eisdecke ĂŒber den flachen Thermokarstteichen/-seen im Winter bis auf den Wasserboden vollstĂ€ndig gefroren sein, was zum geerdeten Eis fĂŒhrt, wĂ€hrend die Eisdecke ĂŒber den tiefen Thermokarstteichen/-seen es nicht kann. In den tiefen Thermokarstteichen/-seen bleibt den ganzen Winter flĂŒssiges Wasser unter der Eisdecke bestehen, was zum Treibeis fĂŒhrt. Das Wintereisdeckenregime bezieht sich auf die Wassertiefe und die Eisdicke. In den Seen mit Treibeis leitet das flĂŒssige Wasser zusĂ€tzliche WĂ€rme in den restlichen Permafrost darunter oder in der Umgebung, was zur weiteren VerstĂ€rkung des Permafrostauftauen beitrĂ€gt. Basiert auf den Charakter, dass das flĂŒssige Wasser eine bemerkenswert hohe DielektrizitĂ€tskonstante besitzt, wĂ€hrend reines Eis einen niedrigen Wert hat, wurden die SAR DatensĂ€tzen zur Erkennung des Wintereisdeckenregimes verwendet. ZunĂ€chst wurden Schemen in der rĂ€umlichen Verteilung der Eisdeckenregimes der Thermokarstteiche in einer typischen diskontinuierlichen Permafrostregion abgeleitet. Dann wurden die ZusammenhĂ€nge dieser Eisdeckenregimes mit dem Degradationszustand des Permafrosts und der Entwicklung der Thermokarstteiche in zwei historischen Phasen (Sheldrake Einzugsgebiet in 1957 und 2009, Tasiapik Tal in 1994 und 2010) erforscht. Die Ergebnisse deuten darauf, dass die Eisdeckenregimes der Thermokarstteiche von der Bodenart, dem Degradationszustand des Permafrosts und der Permafrosttiefe beeinflusst werden. Es ist schwer, die Permafrostdegradation in einem einzelnen Jahr direkt durch den Abdeckungsbereich der Treibeis-Teiche und die Prozentzahl aller aus solchen Treibeis-Teichen bestehenden Thermokarstteiche abzuschĂ€tzen. Ein kontinuierliches Monitoring der Eisdeckenregimes und -oberflĂ€chen ist empfehlenswert, um den hydrologischen Verlauf des Thermokarstprozesses zu erlĂ€utern. In dieser Dissertation wurden mehrere operativen Monitoringsmethoden entwickelt. In der Zwischenzeit wurden die rĂ€umliche Verteilung der saisonalen Bodentauabsenkung, die Permafrostlandschaft, die Thermokarstteiche und ihre Wintereisdeckenregimes erstmals in diesem Untersuchungsgebiet aufgedeckt. Die Ergebnisse tragen dazu bei, den Zustand und die Dynamik der Permafrostumwelt zu verstehen

    Monitoring permafrost environments with Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) sensors

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    Permafrost occupies approximately 24% of the exposed land area in the Northern Hemisphere. It is an important element of the cryosphere and has strong impacts on hydrology, biological processes, land surface energy budget, and infrastructure. For several decades, surface air temperatures in the high northern latitudes have warmed at approximately twice the global rate. Permafrost temperatures have increased in most regions since the early 1980s, the averaged warming north of 60°N has been 1-2°C. In-situ measurements are essential to understanding physical processes in permafrost terrain, but they have several limitations, ranging from difficulties in drilling to the representativeness of limited single point measurements. Remote sensing is urgently needed to supplement ground-based measurements and extend the point observations to a broader spatial domain. This thesis concentrates on the sub-arctic permafrost environment monitoring with SAR datasets. The study site is selected in a typical discontinuous permafrost region in the eastern Canadian sub-Arctic. Inuit communities in Nunavik and Nunatsiavut in the Canadian eastern sub-arctic are amongst the groups most affected by the impacts of climate change and permafrost degradation. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) datasets have advantages for permafrost monitoring in the Arctic and sub-arctic regions because of its high resolution and independence of cloud cover and solar illumination. To date, permafrost environment monitoring methods and strategies with SAR datasets are still under development. The variability of active layer thickness is a direct indication of permafrost thermal state changes. The Differential SAR Interferometry (D-InSAR) technique is applied in the study site to derive ground deformation, which is introduced by the thawing/freezing depth of active layer and underlying permafrost. The D-InSAR technique has been used for the mapping of ground surface deformation over large areas by interpreting the phase difference between two signals acquired at different times as ground motion information. It shows the ability to detect freeze/thaw-related ground motion over permafrost regions. However, to date, accuracy and value assessments of D-InSAR applications have focused mostly on the continuous permafrost region where the vegetation is less developed and causes fewer complicating factors for the D-InSAR application, less attention is laid on the discontinuous permafrost terrain. In this thesis, the influencing factors and application conditions for D-InSAR in the discontinuous permafrost environment are evaluated by using X- band and L-band data. Then, benefit from by the high-temporal resolution of C-band Sentinel-1 time series, the seasonal displacement is derived from small baseline subsets (SBAS)-InSAR. Landforms are indicative of permafrost presence, with their changes inferring modifications to permafrost conditions. A permafrost landscape mapping method was developed which uses multi-temporal TerraSAR-X backscatter intensity and interferometric coherence information. The land cover map is generated through the combined use of object-based image analysis (OBIA) and classification and regression tree analysis (CART). An overall accuracy of 98% is achieved when classifying rock and water bodies, and an accuracy of 79% is achieved when discriminating between different vegetation types with one year of single-polarized acquisitions. This classification strategy can be transferred to other time-series SAR datasets, e.g., Sentinel-1, and other heterogeneous environments. One predominant change in the landscape tied to the thaw of permafrost is the dynamics of thermokarst lakes. Dynamics of thermokarst lakes are developed through their lateral extent and vertical depth changes. Due to different water depth, ice cover over shallow thermokarst ponds/lakes can freeze completely to the lake bed in winter, resulting in grounded ice; while ice cover over deep thermokarst ponds/lakes cannot, which have liquid water persisting under the ice cover all winter, resulting in floating ice. Winter ice cover regimes are related to water depths and ice thickness. In the lakes having floating ice, the liquid water induces additional heat in the remaining permafrost underneath and surroundings, which contributes to further intensified permafrost thawing. SAR datasets are utilized to detect winter ice cover regimes based on the character that liquid water has a remarkably high dielectric constant, whereas pure ice has a low value. Patterns in the spatial distribution of ice-cover regimes of thermokarst ponds in a typical discontinuous permafrost region are first revealed. Then, the correlations of these ice-cover regimes with the permafrost degradation states and thermokarst pond development in two historical phases (Sheldrake catchment in the year 1957 and 2009, Tasiapik Valley 1994 and 2010) were explored. The results indicate that the ice-cover regimes of thermokarst ponds are affected by soil texture, permafrost degradation stage and permafrost depth. Permafrost degradation is difficult to directly assess from the coverage area of floating-ice ponds and the percentage of all thermokarst ponds consisting of such floating-ice ponds in a single year. Continuous monitoring of ice-cover regimes and surface areas is recommended to elucidate the hydrological trajectory of the thermokarst process. Several operational monitoring methods have been developed in this thesis work. In the meanwhile, the spatial distribution of seasonal ground thaw subsidence, permafrost landscape, thermokarst ponds and their winter ice cover regimes are first revealed in the study area. The outcomes help understand the state and dynamics of permafrost environment.Der Permafrostboden bedeckt etwa 24% der exponierten LandflĂ€che in der nördlichen HemisphĂ€re. Es ist ein wichtiges Element der KryosphĂ€re und hat starke Auswirkungen auf die Hydrologie, die biologischen Prozesse, das Energie-Budget der LandoberflĂ€che und die Infrastruktur. Seit mehreren Jahrzehnten erhöhen sich die OberflĂ€chenlufttemperaturen in den nördlichen hohen Breitengraden etwa doppelt so stark wie die globale Rate. Die Temperaturen der Permafrostböden sind in den meisten Regionen seit den frĂŒhen 1980er Jahren gestiegen. Die durchschnittliche ErwĂ€rmung nördlich von 60° N betrĂ€gt 1-2°C. In-situ-Messungen sind essentiell fĂŒr das VerstĂ€ndnis der physischen Prozesse im PermafrostgelĂ€nde. Es gibt jedoch mehrere EinschrĂ€nkungen, die von Schwierigkeiten beim Bohren bis hin zur ReprĂ€sentativitĂ€t begrenzter Einzelpunktmessungen reichen. Fernerkundung ist dringend benötigt, um bodenbasierte Messungen zu ergĂ€nzen und punktuelle Beobachtungen auf einen breiteren rĂ€umlichen Bereich auszudehnen. Diese Dissertation konzentriert sich auf die Umweltbeobachtung der subarktischen Permafrostböden mit SAR-DatensĂ€tzen. Das Untersuchungsgebiet wurde in einer typischen diskontinuierlichen Permafrostzone in der kanadischen östlichen Sub-Arktis ausgewĂ€hlt. Die Inuit-Gemeinschaften in den Regionen Nunavik und Nunatsiavut in der kanadischen östlichen Sub-Arktis gehören zu den Gruppen, die am stĂ€rksten von den Auswirkungen des Klimawandels und Permafrostdegradation betroffen sind. Synthetische Apertur Radar (SAR) DatensĂ€tze haben Vorteile fĂŒr das Permafrostmonitoring in den arktischen und subarktischen Regionen aufgrund der hohen Auflösung und der UnabhĂ€ngigkeit von Wolkendeckung und Sonnenstrahlung. Bis heute sind die Methoden und Strategien mit SAR-DatensĂ€tzen fĂŒr Umweltbeobachtung der Permafrostböden noch in der Entwicklung. Die VariabilitĂ€t der Auftautiefe der aktiven Schicht ist eine direkte Indikation der VerĂ€nderung des thermischen Zustands der Permafrostböden. Die Differential-SAR-Interferometrie(D-Insar)-Technik wird im Untersuchungsgebiet zur Ableitung der Bodendeformation, die durch Auftau- / und Gefriertiefe der aktiven Schicht und des unterliegenden Permafrostbodens eingefĂŒhrt wird, eingesetzt. Die D-InSAR-Technik wurde fĂŒr Kartierung der LandoberflĂ€chendeformation ĂŒber große FlĂ€chen verwendet, indem der Phasenunterschied zwischen zwei zu verschiedenen Zeitpunkten als Bodenbewegungsinformation erfassten Signalen interpretiert wurde. Es zeigt die FĂ€higkeit, tau- und gefrierprozessbedingte Bodenbewegungen ĂŒber Permafrostregionen zu detektieren. Jedoch fokussiert sich die Genauigkeit und WertschĂ€tzung der D-InSAR-Anwendung bis heute hauptsĂ€chlich auf kontinuierliche Permafrostregion, wo die Vegetation wenig entwickelt ist und weniger komplizierte Faktoren fĂŒr D-InSAR-Anwendung verursacht. Das diskontinuierliche PermafrostgelĂ€nde wurde nur weniger berĂŒcksichtigt. In dieser Dissertation wurden die Einflussfaktoren und Anwendungsbedingungen fĂŒr D-InSAR im diskontinuierlichen Permafrostgebiet mittels X-Band und L-Band Daten ausgewertet. Dann wurde die saisonale Verschiebung dank der hohen Auflösung der C-Band Sentinel-1 Zeitreihe von „Small Baseline Subsets (SBAS)-InSAR“ abgeleitet. Landformen weisen auf die PrĂ€senz des Permafrosts hin, wobei deren VerĂ€nderungen auf die Modifikation der Permafrostbedingungen schließen. Eine Kartierungsmethode der Permafrostlandschaft wurde entwickelt, dabei wurde Multi-temporal TerraSAR-X RĂŒckstreuungsintensitĂ€t und interferometrische KohĂ€renzinformationen verwendet. Die Landbedeckungskarte wurde durch kombinierte Anwendung objektbasierter Bildanalyse (OBIA) und Klassifikations- und Regressionsbaum Analyse (CART) generiert. Eine Gesamtgenauigkeit in Höhe von 98% wurde bei Klassifikation der Gesteine und Wasserkörper erreicht. Bei Unterscheidung zwischen verschiedenen Vegetationstypen mit einem Jahr einzelpolarisierte Akquisitionen wurde eine Genauigkeit von 79% erreicht. Diese Klassifikationsstrategie kann auf andere Zeitreihen der SAR-DatensĂ€tzen, z.B. Sentinel-1, und auch anderen heterogenen Umwelten ĂŒbertragen werden. Eine vorherrschende VerĂ€nderung in der Landschaft, die mit dem Auftauen des Permafrosts verbunden ist, ist die Dynamik der Thermokarstseen. Die Dynamik der Thermokarstseen ist durch VerĂ€nderungen der seitlichen Ausdehnung und der vertikalen Tiefe entwickelt. Aufgrund der unterschiedlichen Wassertiefen kann die Eisdecke ĂŒber den flachen Thermokarstteichen/-seen im Winter bis auf den Wasserboden vollstĂ€ndig gefroren sein, was zum geerdeten Eis fĂŒhrt, wĂ€hrend die Eisdecke ĂŒber den tiefen Thermokarstteichen/-seen es nicht kann. In den tiefen Thermokarstteichen/-seen bleibt den ganzen Winter flĂŒssiges Wasser unter der Eisdecke bestehen, was zum Treibeis fĂŒhrt. Das Wintereisdeckenregime bezieht sich auf die Wassertiefe und die Eisdicke. In den Seen mit Treibeis leitet das flĂŒssige Wasser zusĂ€tzliche WĂ€rme in den restlichen Permafrost darunter oder in der Umgebung, was zur weiteren VerstĂ€rkung des Permafrostauftauen beitrĂ€gt. Basiert auf den Charakter, dass das flĂŒssige Wasser eine bemerkenswert hohe DielektrizitĂ€tskonstante besitzt, wĂ€hrend reines Eis einen niedrigen Wert hat, wurden die SAR DatensĂ€tzen zur Erkennung des Wintereisdeckenregimes verwendet. ZunĂ€chst wurden Schemen in der rĂ€umlichen Verteilung der Eisdeckenregimes der Thermokarstteiche in einer typischen diskontinuierlichen Permafrostregion abgeleitet. Dann wurden die ZusammenhĂ€nge dieser Eisdeckenregimes mit dem Degradationszustand des Permafrosts und der Entwicklung der Thermokarstteiche in zwei historischen Phasen (Sheldrake Einzugsgebiet in 1957 und 2009, Tasiapik Tal in 1994 und 2010) erforscht. Die Ergebnisse deuten darauf, dass die Eisdeckenregimes der Thermokarstteiche von der Bodenart, dem Degradationszustand des Permafrosts und der Permafrosttiefe beeinflusst werden. Es ist schwer, die Permafrostdegradation in einem einzelnen Jahr direkt durch den Abdeckungsbereich der Treibeis-Teiche und die Prozentzahl aller aus solchen Treibeis-Teichen bestehenden Thermokarstteiche abzuschĂ€tzen. Ein kontinuierliches Monitoring der Eisdeckenregimes und -oberflĂ€chen ist empfehlenswert, um den hydrologischen Verlauf des Thermokarstprozesses zu erlĂ€utern. In dieser Dissertation wurden mehrere operativen Monitoringsmethoden entwickelt. In der Zwischenzeit wurden die rĂ€umliche Verteilung der saisonalen Bodentauabsenkung, die Permafrostlandschaft, die Thermokarstteiche und ihre Wintereisdeckenregimes erstmals in diesem Untersuchungsgebiet aufgedeckt. Die Ergebnisse tragen dazu bei, den Zustand und die Dynamik der Permafrostumwelt zu verstehen

    Detection and classification of sea ice from spaceborne multi-frequency synthetic aperture radar imagery and radar altimetry

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    The sea ice cover in the Arctic is undergoing drastic changes. Since the start of satellite observations by microwave remote sensing in the late 1970\u27s, the maximum summer sea ice extent has been decreasing and thereby causing a generally thinner and younger sea ice cover. Spaceborne radar remote sensing facilitates the determination of sea ice properties in a changing climate with the high spatio-temporal resolution necessary for a better understanding of the ongoing processes as well as safe navigation and operation in ice infested waters.The work presented in this thesis focuses on the one hand on synergies of multi-frequency spaceborne synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery for sea ice classification. On the other hand, the fusion of radar altimetry observations with near-coincidental SAR imagery is investigated for its potential to improve 3-dimensional sea ice information retrieval.Investigations of ice/water classification of C- and L-band SAR imagery with a feed-forward neural network demonstrated the capabilities of both frequencies to outline the sea ice edge with good accuracy. Classification results also indicate that a combination of both frequencies can improve the identification of thin ice areas within the ice pack compared to C-band alone. Incidence angle normalisation has proven to increase class separability of different ice types. Analysis of incidence angle dependence between 19-47\ub0 at co- and cross-polarisation from Sentinel-1 C-band images closed a gap in existing slope estimates at cross-polarisation for multiyear sea ice and confirms values obtained in other regions of the Arctic or with different sensors. Furthermore, it demonstrated that insufficient noise correction of the first subswath at cross-polarisation increased the slope estimates by 0.01 dB/1\ub0 for multiyear ice. The incidence angle dependence of the Sentinel-1 noise floor affected smoother first-year sea ice and made the first subswath unusable for reliable incidence angle estimates in those cases.Radar altimetry can complete the 2-dimensional sea ice picture with thickness information. By comparison of SAR imagery with altimeter waveforms from CryoSat-2, it is demonstrated that waveforms respond well to changes of the sea ice surface in the order of a few hundred metres to a few kilometres. Freeboard estimates do however not always correspond to these changes especially when mixtures of different ice types are found within the footprint. Homogeneous ice floes of about 10 km are necessary for robust averaged freeboard estimates. The results demonstrate that multi-frequency and multi-sensor approaches open up for future improvements of sea ice retrievals from radar remote sensing techniques, but access to in-situ data for training and validation will be critical

    Automated SEA ICE Classification Over the Baltic SEA using Multiparametric Features of Tandem-X Insar Images

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    In this study, bistatic interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) data acquired by the TanDEM-X mission were used for automated classification of sea ice over the Baltic Sea, in the Bothnic Bay. A scene acquired in March of 2012 was used in the study. Backscatter-intensity, coherence-magnitude and InSAR-phase, as well as their different combinations, were used as informative features in several classification approaches. In order to achieve the best discrimination between open water and several sea ice types (new ice, thin smooth ice, close ice, very close ice, ridged ice, heavily ridged ice and ship-track), Random Forests (RF) and Maximum likelihood (ML) classifiers were employed. The best overall accuracies were achieved using combination of backscatter-intensity & InSAR-phase and backscatter-intensity & coherence-magnitude, and were 76.86% and 75.81% with RF and ML classifiers, respectively. Overall, the combination of backscatter-intensity & InSAR-phase with RF classifier was suggested due to the highest overall accuracy (OA) and smaller computing time in comparison to ML. In contrast to several earlier studies, we were able to discriminate water and the thin smooth ice.Peer reviewe

    TanDEM-X multiparametric data features in sea ice classification over the Baltic sea

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    In this study, we assess the potential of X-band Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar imagery for automated classification of sea ice over the Baltic Sea. A bistatic SAR scene acquired by the TanDEM-X mission over the Bothnian Bay in March of 2012 was used in the analysis. Backscatter intensity, interferometric coherence magnitude, and interferometric phase have been used as informative features in several classification experiments. Various combinations of classification features were evaluated using Maximum likelihood (ML), Random Forests (RF) and Support Vector Machine (SVM) classifiers to achieve the best possible discrimination between open water and several sea ice types (undeformed ice, ridged ice, moderately deformed ice, brash ice, thick level ice, and new ice). Adding interferometric phase and coherence-magnitude to backscatter-intensity resulted in improved overall classification performance compared to using only backscatter-intensity. The RF algorithm appeared to be slightly superior to SVM and ML due to higher overall accuracies, however, at the expense of somewhat longer processing time. The best overall accuracy (OA) for three methodologies were achieved using combination of all tested features were 71.56, 72.93, and 72.91% for ML, RF and SVM classifiers, respectively. Compared to OAs of 62.28, 66.51, and 63.05% using only backscatter intensity, this indicates strong benefit of SAR interferometry in discriminating different types of sea ice. In contrast to several earlier studies, we were particularly able to successfully discriminate open water and new ice classes.Peer reviewe

    Remote Sensing of Snow Cover Using Spaceborne SAR: A Review

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    The importance of snow cover extent (SCE) has been proven to strongly link with various natural phenomenon and human activities; consequently, monitoring snow cover is one the most critical topics in studying and understanding the cryosphere. As snow cover can vary signiïŹcantly within short time spans and often extends over vast areas, spaceborne remote sensing constitutes an eïŹƒcient observation technique to track it continuously. However, as optical imagery is limited by cloud cover and polar darkness, synthetic aperture radar (SAR) attracted more attention for its ability to sense day-and-night under any cloud and weather condition. In addition to widely applied backscattering-based method, thanks to the advancements of spaceborne SAR sensors and image processing techniques, many new approaches based on interferometric SAR (InSAR) and polarimetric SAR (PolSAR) have been developed since the launch of ERS-1 in 1991 to monitor snow cover under both dry and wet snow conditions. Critical auxiliary data including DEM, land cover information, and local meteorological data have also been explored to aid the snow cover analysis. This review presents an overview of existing studies and discusses the advantages, constraints, and trajectories of the current developments

    Integrating Incidence Angle Dependencies Into the Clustering-Based Segmentation of SAR Images

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    Synthetic aperture radar systems perform signal acquisition under varying incidence angles and register an implicit intensity decay from near to far range. Owing to the geometrical interaction between microwaves and the imaged targets, the rates at which intensities decay depend on the nature of the targets, thus rendering single-rate image correction approaches only partially successful. The decay, also known as the incidence angle effect, impacts the segmentation of wide-swath images performed on absolute intensity values. We propose to integrate the target-specific intensity decay rates into a nonstationary statistical model, for use in a fully automatic and unsupervised segmentation algorithm. We demonstrate this concept by assuming Gaussian distributed log-intensities and linear decay rates, a fitting approximation for the smooth systematic decay observed for extended flat targets. The segmentation is performed on Sentinel-1, Radarsat-2, and UAVSAR wide-swath scenes containing open water, sea ice, and oil slicks. As a result, we obtain segments connected throughout the entire incidence angle range, thus overcoming the limitations of modeling that does not account for different per-target decays. The model simplicity also allows for short execution times and presents the segmentation approach as a potential operational algorithm. In addition, we estimate the log-linear decay rates and examine their potential for a physical interpretation of the segments

    Remote Sensing of Floodpath Lakes and Wetlands: A Challenging Frontier in the Monitoring of Changing Environments

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    Monitoring of changing lake and wetland environments has long been among the primary focus of scientific investigation, technology innovation, management practice, and decision-making analysis. Floodpath lakes and wetlands are the lakes and associated wetlands affected by seasonal variations of water level and water surface area. Floodpath lakes and wetlands are, in particular, sensitive to natural and anthropogenic impacts, such as climate change, human-induced intervention on hydrological regimes, and land use and land cover change. Rapid developments of remote sensing science and technologies, provide immense opportunities and capacities to improve our understanding of the changing lake and wetland environments. This special issue on Remote Sensing of Floodpath Lakes and Wetlands comprise featured articles reporting the latest innovative research and reflects the advancement in remote sensing applications on the theme topic. In this editorial paper, we review research developments using state-of-the-art remote sensing technologies for monitoring dynamics of floodpath lakes and wetlands; discuss challenges of remote sensing in inventory, monitoring, management, and governance of floodpath lakes and wetlands; and summarize the highlights of the articles published in this special issue

    Arctic Sea Ice Characterization using Spaceborne Fully Polarimetric L-, C- and X-Band SAR with Validation by Airborne Measurements

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    Accepted manuscript version. Published version available at https://doi.org/10.1109/TGRS.2018.2809504.In recent years, spaceborne synthetic aperture radar (SAR) polarimetry has become a valuable tool for sea ice analysis. Here, we employ an automatic sea ice classification algorithm on two sets of spatially and temporally near coincident fully polarimetric acquisitions from the ALOS-2, Radarsat-2, and TerraSAR-X/TanDEM-X satellites. Overlapping coincident sea ice freeboard measurements from airborne laser scanner data are used to validate the classification results. The automated sea ice classification algorithm consists of two steps. In the first step, we perform a polarimetric feature extraction procedure. Next, the resulting feature vectors are ingested into a trained neural network classifier to arrive at a pixelwise supervised classification. Coherency matrix-based features that require an eigendecomposition are found to be either of low relevance or redundant to other covariance matrix-based features, which makes coherency matrix-based features dispensable for the purpose of sea ice classification. Among the most useful features for classification are matrix invariant-based features (geometric intensity, scattering diversity, and surface scattering fraction). Classification results show that 100% of the open water is separated from the surrounding sea ice and that the sea ice classes have at least 96.9% accuracy. This analysis reveals analogous results for both X-band and C-band frequencies and slightly different for the L-band. The subsequent classification produces similarly promising results for all four acquisitions. In particular, the overlapping image portions exhibit a reasonable congruence of detected sea ice when compared with high-resolution airborne measurements
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