Aspen Bibliography
Using the space-borne NASA scatterometer (NSCAT) to determine the frozen and thawed seasons
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres.
Volume
104
Issue
D22
First Page
27895
Last Page
27907
Publication Date
1999
Abstract
We hypothesize that the strong sensitivity of radar backscatter to surface dielectric properties, and hence to the phase (solid or liquid) of any water near the surface should make space-borne radar observations a powerful tool for large-scale spatial monitoring of the freeze/thaw state of the land surface, and thus ecosystem growing season length. We analyzed the NASA scatterometer (NSCAT) backscatter from September 1996 to June 1997, along with temperature and snow depth observations and ecosystem modeling, for three BOREAS sites in central Canada. Because of its short wavelength (2.14 cm), NSCAT was sensitive to canopy and surface water. NSCAT had 25 km spatial resolution and approximately twice-daily temporal coverage at the BOREAS latitude. At the northern site the NSCAT signal showed strong seasonality, with backscatter around −8 dB in winter and −12 dB in early summer and fall. The NSCAT signal for the southern sites had less seasonality. At all three sites there was a strong decrease in backscatter during spring thaw (4–6 dB). At the southern deciduous site, NSCAT backscatter rose from −11 to −9.2 dB during spring leaf-out. All sites showed 1–2 dB backscatter shifts corresponding to changes in landscape water state coincident with brief midwinter thaws, snowfall, and extreme cold (Tmax
Recommended Citation
Frolking, S. et al. 1999. Uing the space-borne NASA scatterometer (NSCAT) to determine the frozen and thawed seasons. Journal of Geophysical Research:Atmospheres. 104(D22): 27895-27907.