Airborne observations of arctic-boreal water surface elevations from AirSWOT Ka-Band InSAR and LVIS LiDAR.
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Date
2020Author
Fayne, Jessica V.
Smith, Laurence C.
Pitcher, Lincoln H.
Kyzivat, Ethan D.
Cooley, Sarah W.
Cooper, Matthew G.
Denbina, Michael W.
Chen, Albert C.
Chen, Curtis W.
Pavelsky, Tamlin M.
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AirSWOT is an experimental airborne Ka-band radar interferometer developed by NASA-JPL as a validation instrument for the forthcoming NASA Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) satellite mission. In 2017, AirSWOT was deployed as part of the NASA Arctic Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE) to map surface water elevations across Alaska and western Canada. The result is the most extensive known collection of near-nadir airborne Ka-band interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) data and derivative high-resolution (3.6 m pixel) digital elevation models to produce water surface elevation (WSE) maps. This research provides a synoptic assessment of the 2017 AirSWOT ABoVE dataset to quantify regional WSE errors relative to coincident in situ field surveys and LiDAR data acquired from the NASA Land, Vegetation, and Ice Sensor (LVIS) airborne platform. Results show that AirSWOT WSE data can penetrate cloud cover and have nearly twice the swath-width of LVIS as flown for ABoVE (3.2 k.....
Journal
Environmental Research LettersVolume
15Issue
105005Page Range
10pp.Document Language
enSustainable Development Goals (SDG)
14.aMaturity Level
Pilot or DemonstratedSpatial Coverage
Arctic RegionDOI Original
https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abadccCitation
Fayne, J. V., Smith, L. C., Pitcher, L. H., Kyzivat, E. D., Cooley, S. W., et al. (2020) Airborne observations of arctic-boreal water surface elevations from AirSWOT Ka-Band InSAR and LVIS LiDAR. Environmental Research Letters, 15(105005), 10pp. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abadccCollections
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