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Figure 1. McMurdo Sound in relation to the Antarctic
continent.
2. DETERMINATION OF SEA ICE FREEBOARD
The identification of the actual sea surface is the fundamental
starting point for any freeboard investigation. The spaceborne
retrieval of freeboard is hampered by the complexity of
identifying a sea surface reference level over large areas.
Multiple techniques can be used to establish tie-points at which
additional information indicates that the sea surface is
referenced by ICESat . They can be split into two groups, firstly
by the use of the available ICESat product alone and secondly
the additional use of auxiliary satellite imagery acquired in
near-coincidence with the ICESat groundtrack.
In small geographical regions, such as this under investigation,
tidal analysis together with a known mean sea level is another
alternative.
An overview of ICESat's operational information is presented
in Yi et al. (2011). The following analysis is based on GLA 13
Records, Release 33 of the ICESat/GLAS data Product.
The general equation for generating an ideal sea surface
reference level which takes account of environmental variables
is given by:
Sea level = heLev =} hr + hig + hpor = hg (1)
where hg; gy is the satellite measurement of surface height above
the WGS-84 ellipsoid and hg is the geoidal height. By assuming
that the geoid represents the mean sea level, the actual sea level
is given by taking account of the tide level (hr) and by
correcting for both the inverse barometric effect (hig) and the
water level change due to dynamic ocean topography (DOT)
(hpor). In general, the sum of hg, hr, hig, and hpor is a variable
function in space and time and not known at the required
accuracy. This can be circumvented by establishing the sea level
at tie points along every single satellite track identifying the ice
free sea surface. The steps used in this investigation to generate
a sea surface reference level for the relative determination of
freeboard height closely follows Zwally et al. (2008), who use
open water leads in the sea ice for this purpose. However, some
amendments need to be made considering the shape of the geoid
and tide measurements due to lack of open water in the southern
part of the study area.
The sea ice area was first masked for land and ice shelf by
comparison with Envisat Wide Swath Advanced Synthetic
Aperture Radar (ASAR) imagery. As the resolution and
georeferencing error of the imagery may have led to the
inclusion of some ice shelf elevations an additional elevation
mask was then applied to the data set allowing no positive
deviation above the land fast multiyear (MY) ice at the southern
end of the Sound. This area exhibits the maximum elevation of
sea ice in the area as the positive geoid influence is at its
greatest in the southern segments of the study area. Therefore,
any value above the set -52.5 m WGS84 mask can be
disregarded. The inclusion of large icebergs is also eradicated
with this additional mask. Any tracks with land causing
segregation of the track over greater than a 25 km distance were
also removed.
Finally, all laser shots which have reflectivity values lower than
0.1 and higher than 0.9 are discarded as low and high
reflectivity are indicative of forward scattering waveforms and
saturated waveforms, respectively (Yi et al. 2011).
The Earth Gravitational Model 2008 (EGM2008) depicts the
general shape of the geoid upon hg; gy quite well (Figure 2).
LICE TF PE nn neers Ep
whi
Dev. from WGS84 (m)
-78.0 -77.8 -77.6 -77.4 -77.2 -77.0 -76.8 -76.6
Latitude (degrees)
Figure 2. Systematic sampling of every 100" shot in the record
of all hg gy values (black) and EGM2008 (orange). The
dominant trend in the hg; gy is clearly the geoid. The modelled
trend is representative of the observations.
The recorded ICESat surface elevation (hg gy) is the initial
elevation retrieval used in this investigation. This surface
elevation is referenced to the WGS84 ellipsoid. Values were
then adjusted in order to remove any bias on the sea surface
reference level related to saturation errors (hsar) and modelled
tides (hr). Due to the small geographical area the influence of
the inverse barometer effect (hg) was neglected. Any remaining
bias on the sea surface reference level can then be attributed to
the modelled geoid (hggmoes) tides and hpor. With insufficient
information on the latter this is disregarded giving:
h ~ hg gy + hgar + hr — hecmos (2)
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