Impact of varying solar angles on Arctic iceberg area retrieval from Sentinel-2 near-infrared data
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35978Dato
2024-11-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Icebergs are part of the glacial mass balance and they interact with the ocean and with sea ice. Optical satellite remote sensing is often used to retrieve the above-waterline area of icebergs. However, varying solar angles introduce an error to the iceberg area retrieval that had not been quantified. Herein, we approximate the iceberg area error for top-of-atmosphere Sentinel-2 near-infrared data at a range of solar zenith angles. First, we calibrate an iceberg threshold at a 56◦ solar zenith angle with reference to higher resolution airborne imagery at Storfjorden, Svalbard. A reflectance threshold of 0.12 yields the lowest relative error of 0.19% ± 15.74% and the lowest interquartile spread. Second, we apply the 0.12 reflectance threshold to Sentinel-2 data at 14 solar zenith angles between 45◦ and 81◦ in the Kangerlussuaq Fjord, south-east Greenland. Here we quantify the error variation with the solar zenith angle for a consistent set of large icebergs. The error variation is then standardized to the error obtained in Svalbard. Up to a solar zenith angle of 65◦, the mean standardized iceberg area error remains between 5.9% and −5.67%. Above 65◦, iceberg areas are underestimated and inconsistent, caused by a segregation into shadows and sun-facing slopes.
Forlag
Cambrigde University PressSitering
Fisser H, Doulgeris ap, Høyland KVH. Impact of varying solar angles on Arctic iceberg area retrieval from Sentinel-2 near-infrared data.. Annals of Glaciology. 2024Metadata
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