Introduction
The current and future contributions to sea-level change from ice masses around the world remain difficult to estimate, due to the limited availability of ice-thickness data (e.g. Reference Jacob, Wahr and PfefferJacob and others; 2012). Efficient, airborne ice-thickness and/or bed-topography data are needed to estimate fluxes of outlet glaciers into the ocean, the total volume of ice left in drainage basins, and its partitioning above and below sea level. High-frequency (>50 MHz) radar sounders are routinely used to map ice thickness, detect internal layers and provide information about basal conditions (Reference GogineniGogineni and others, 2001). A large number of airborne campaigns have been conducted in Greenland and Antarctica over the last decade, especially under NASA's Operation IceBridge (OIB) (Reference StoltStudinger and others, 2010) using, among others, the Multichannel Coherent Radar Depth Sounder (MCoRDS) from the Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS) (Reference GogineniGogineni and others, 2001; Reference AllenAllen, 2010; Reference Rodriguez-MoralesRodriguez-Morales and others, 2013) and the High-Capability Radar Sounder (HiCARS) from the University of Texas at Austin (Reference Blankenship, Kempf and YoungBlankenship and others, 2011; Reference YoungYoung and others, 2011). MCoRDS and HiCARS operate at bandwidths of 140–210 and 52.5–67.5 MHz, respectively. Comprehensive ice-thickness maps of Greenland and Antarctica have been produced using data from these and other systems (Reference BamberBamber and others, 2013; Reference FretwellFretwell and others, 2013), yet significant gaps exist, in particular at the coastline and along deep channels occupied by outlet glaciers. An electromagnetic wave propagating in ice (a dielectric medium) loses its signal strength to geometric spreading, absorption, volume scattering and high surface and bottom scatter. Volume scattering depends strongly on radar frequency and the presence of liquid water. Regions containing englacial channels, fractures and crevasses, either drained or containing liquid water, create scatter (Reference SmithSmith and Evans, 1972; Reference ArconeArcone, 2002; Reference Catania and NeumannCatania and Neumann, 2010). Rayleigh-scattering theory suggests that when the scatterers are smaller than the radar wavelength, scattering losses are inversely proportional to the fourth power of the radar wavelength (Reference IshimaruIshimaru, 1978), so the sounding of such regions has proven difficult for radar sounders operating at >50 MHz (Reference SmithSmith and Evans, 1972; Reference Watts and EnglandWatts and England, 1976; Reference Watts and WrightWatts and Wright, 1981).
In Alaska or Patagonia, where ice is at the melting point throughout the ice column (Reference Molnia, Williams and FerrignoMolnia, 2008), only radars operating below 5MHz have been used to retrieve ice thickness (Reference Brown, Rasmussen and MeierBrown and others, 1986; Reference Jacobel and AndersonJacobel and Anderson, 1987; Reference Raymond, Neumann, Rignot, Echelmeyer, Rivera and RiveraRaymond and others, 2005; Reference Conway, Smith, Vaswani, Matsuoka, Rignot and RignotConway and others, 2009; Reference Gades, Raymond and ConwayGades and others, 2012).
In Greenland, especially along the southern coasts, moulins (Reference Catania and NeumannCatania and Neumann, 2010), englacial conduits (Reference Catania, Neumann and PriceCatania and others, 2008), supraglacial lakes (Reference McMillan, Nienow, Shepherd, Benham and BenhamMcMillan and others, 2007) and water-filled crevasses (Reference Lampkin, Amador, Parizek, Farness and FarnessLampkin and others, 2013) are commonly found below the equilibrium-line altitude (ELA), attesting to the presence of liquid water, and may limit the ability of the higher-frequency radars to detect the bed interface by creating a strong scattering environment.
Based on previous successes with ground-based low-frequency radar, we have developed, since 2006, a decameter-wavelength airborne radar sounder (1–5 MHz), the Warm Ice Sounding Explorer (WISE), that is designed to measure ice thickness in areas where radar signal penetration is limited at higher frequencies. In another paper, we reported results obtained in Alaska that demonstrate the full capacity of the system over temperate ice, with ice-thickness measurements exceeding 1200 m and bed returns obtained both in the ablation and accumulation areas of all surveyed glaciers (Reference Rignot, Mouginot, Larsen, Gim and GimRignot and others, 2013a).
In this paper, we provide a succinct description of the system and the radar data. We then give details of three campaigns conducted in southern Greenland in 2008, 2009 and 2010, and two in East Antarctica in 2009 and 2010. We compare radar profiles from MCoRDS and WISE in the extreme south of Greenland, which is likely to be a scattering environment. Finally, to assess the accuracy of our ice-thickness mappings, we compare the results with higher-frequency radar data acquired at two sites with dense grid surveys, one in Greenland and one in Antarctica, hence representative of both scattering and highly penetrative environments. We conclude by discussing the impact of WISE radar sounding in improving our knowledge of ice thickness and bed topography.
Data and Methods
Instrument design
The WISE radar hardware was originally developed as a proof-of-concept system for an ice-penetrating radar to explore Jupiter's icy moons: Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. It is based on a prior design of the Mars Advanced Radar for Subsurface and Ionosphere Sounding (MARSIS) (Reference PicardiPicardi and others, 2005), which was designed to penetrate the Martian subsurface to depths of up to 4 km in ice-rich polar layered deposits, and up to several hundreds of meters in lithic environments (Reference PlautPlautand others, 2007; Reference MouginotMouginot and others, 2010,Reference Mouginot, Pommerol, Beck, Kofman and Clifford2012).
The radar consists of a digital system with a GPS interface, a radio-frequency (RF) receiver, an RF transmitter with matching network and an antenna (Fig. 1). The transmitter, the key component of WISE, was developed under the NASA Planetary Instruments Definition and Development Program (PIDDP) with requirements including radiation tolerance, small size and high efficiency. The design is based on the MARSIS transmitter built by the University of Iowa. The antenna is constructed inside a 120 m long static rope. Electrically, it is heavily damped to minimize ringing, which allows operation at low altitudes and a wide frequency range of 1-5 MHz, at the expense of a reduced radiated power of <1 W. Due to its long length, the antenna is released and retracted in the air via a small opening in the aircraft floor. To lower the antenna below the aircraft belly, a Teflon drogue and counterweight is attached to the end of the antenna, to maintain a shallow antenna angle of 30° in flight. This allows the antenna to stay away from the aircraft fuselage. The antenna coupler drives the resistively loaded wire antenna against the airplane structure. The antenna behaves like a dipole, using the aircraft as a ground plane, and its design was optimized using a Nippon Electronic Company computer model simulation by the University of Iowa to maximize coupling with the transmitter/receiver.
The RF receiver is a commercial Ritec broadband receiver, BR-640A, with a frequency range of 100 kHz to 50 MHz. The analog signal output of the receiver is connected via a coaxial cable to the input of a 12-bit analog-to-digital converter (A/D) in a National Instruments data acquisition computer. The A/D runs at 100 MHz. After on-board pre-summing of 14-fold, the data are stored into 16 bits on the computer disk, in sequences of 20 min of acquisition. A conventional GPS receiver is operated at 20 Hz along with the radar, with a vertical precision of ~20 m. The total mass, including the mounting rack for the transmitter and receiver, is ~50 kg. The power consumption of the system is <100W.
WISE transmits tone or chirp waveforms at a pulse repetition frequency (PRF) of 1 kHz (Table 1). The tone mode uses a single continuous-wave pulse centered at 2.5 MHz for a duration of 1 us (Fig. 2). The chirp mode transmits a linear FM chirp centered between 2 and 5 MHz over a bandwidth of 1-3 MHz for a duration of 3-6 us (Fig. 3).
Radar command parameters (e.g. PRF, center frequency, waveform (tone or chirp) and sampling rate) are controlled using a Labview code, and may be changed at any time with a small time gap between command updates. With on-board processes (e.g. range compression and pre-summing), WISE displays radar echograms in real time. This allows the operator to monitor bed returns during flight and adjust radar parameters accordingly.
We recorded at altitudes between 250 m and 1 km above the surface. Lower altitudes increase spatial resolution, reduce surface clutter and clip radar returns from the surface. When the altitude is low, surface incidence angles toward off-nadir targets increase and signals rapidly weaken. Clipping of the surface returns also limits the saturation of the receiver, which results in a higher signal-to-noise ratio of the bed returns.
Processing
For chirp signals, post-processing begins with range compression using a transmitted waveform as the reference (Fig. 3). Incoherent summation or fully focused synthetic aperture radar (SAR) processing using a !–k migration algorithm (Stolt, 1978) follows, depending on surface roughness and track length. GPS data are also processed into Google Keyhole Markup Language (kml) format so each track can be displayed on Google Earth.
The echo profiles are manually digitized to delineate the glacier bed in three steps: (1) the bed is roughly defined by a user using a few ‘anchor points’, where the bed return is unambiguously identified; (2) the maximum intensity along the lines that connect these anchor points is used to set the bed position along track (see Figs 2 and 3); (3) this digitized glacier bed echo is checked at crossing points with other tracks or other datasets to limit the possibility of false detection (e.g. due to off-nadir radar reflections), which is generally not an issue in Greenland and Antarctica, where the surface is flat compared to mountainous regions, such as Alaska or Patagonia.
WISE is often operated at low altitudes above the surface, hence clipping the surface returns. The surface references needed to measure ice thickness are from the Greenland Ice http://bprc.osu.edu/GDG/gimpdem.php Mapping Project (GIMP) digital elevation model (DEM; and from the 1km DEM that combines European Remote-sensing Satellite (ERS-1) radar and Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) laser satellite altimetry (Reference Bamber, Gomez-Dans and GriggsBamber and others, 2009; Reference Griggs and BamberGriggs and Bamber, 2009).
Ice-Thickness Measurements
Greenland
We conducted three surveys in Greenland with WISE in May 2008, April 2009 and March 2010, using a Twin Otter aircraft from Air Greenland with a total of 18, 37 and 35 hours of survey, respectively. Most of the flight lines are within 100 km of the Greenland ice sheet margins, i.e. where output ice fluxes to the ocean are most conveniently estimated, most heavily crevassed and the ice likely contains liquid water.
In terms of maximum penetration depth, we recorded bed reflections through 2.2 km of ice across the ice sheet between Russell Glacier and Kangerlussuaq Glacier (Fig. 4). We observed that the signal-to-noise ratio decreases toward southern Greenland, where ice is exposed to the highest air temperatures, and hence the highest amount of liquid water within the ice (Reference BoxBox and others, 2006; Reference Sundal, Shepherd, Nienow, Hanna, Palmer and PalmerSundal and others, 2009). The southernmost area of Greenland, which ends with the 100 km wide Qassimiut lobe, is drained by tidewater glaciers that include Qajuuttap Sermia, Sermilik and Eqalorutsit Killiit Sermiat, and land-terminating glaciers, such as Søndre Qipisaqqu Bræ and Arsuk Bræ.
In the Qassimiut lobe sector, data acquired in May 2013, June 2006, May 2010, April 2012 and March 2013 by MCoRDS radar (>150MHz) provide good measurements of ice thickness -50-150 km from the ice-sheet margins (Fig. 5), and gradually degrade as the margins are approached. Thus, few ice-thickness measurements have been made in the southern part of the Qassimiut lobe, where bed topography has remained largely undocumented. WISE, which flew within 50 km of the ice margins of the Qassimiut lobe, obtained relatively good ice-thickness data over 50% of the flight lines flown. We define ‘good’ to mean that the signal-to-noise ratio for the bedrock echo is >10dB.
Figure 6 compares two echo-radargrams from WISE (Fig. 6b) and MCoRDS (Fig. 6c) acquired along similar flight lines on 22 March 2010 and 9 May 2003, respectively. An ice-bed return (yellow line) is visible on the 2-5 MHz echogram from 3 to 15 km starting at a depth of 150 m and reaching depths of 700 m, where no signal is visible within the MCoRDS echogram. The surface of this particular region is very flat, so confusion between surface and ice-bed returns leading to misinterpretation is unlikely. MCoRDS data were generally acquired later in the season, and the lack of return could also be explained by the presence of substantial surface melt. However, we observe that recent acquisitions on 8 April 2013, only 2 weeks later in the season than WISE, did not yield better results.
Ice thickness measured by WISE in the Qassimiut lobe (Fig. 6) is 300-400 m, with local depressions in bed topography in the front of Arsuk Bræ (580 m), Søndre Qipisaqqu Bræ (910m), Sermilik Bræ (710 m) and Eqalorutsit Killiit Sermiat (1100 m).
Along the southwest coast of Greenland, near Kangerlussuaq town (Fig. 4), an intensive grid was acquired in 2010 over Russell Glacier with a track spacing of 3 km. NASA OIB/MCoRDS conducted a similar survey over the glacier, also in 2010, with a track spacing of 500 m. This test site (Fig. 8c) is used to evaluate the accuracy of WISE in Greenland.
Antarctica
We deployed WISE in East Antarctica (Fig. 7) for 35 and 29 hours in January 2009 and January 2010, respectively. The platform used for deployment was a Twin Otter aircraft from Kenn Borek Air Ltd, Canada, in 2009, and a Kenn Borek ‘Basler’ DC3 aircraft in 2010. In 2009, we surveyed Byrd, Dibble, Mertz, David and Astrolabe glaciers in East Antarctica. In 2010, we surveyed Frost, Mertz and Astrolabe glaciers and the Cook Ice Shelf with both WISE and HiCARS radar. On both deployments, the survey of Astrolabe and Mertz Glaciers was performed in collaboration with the Laboratoire de Glaciologie et Geophysique de l’Environnement, France, with logistic support from the US National Science Foundation and the Institut Paul-Emile Victor.
Close to the French station Dumont d’Urville, Terre Adélie, two intensive grids were surveyed over Astrolabe Glacier in January 2009 and complemented by additional data in January 2010. These data resulted in a 5 km grid of the lower basin, degrading to 20km in the upper part, but producing a complete survey of the entire drainage basin, probably a unique achievement in Antarctica. The drainage basin of Astrolabe Glacier extends -200 km inland and its area is ~1500 km2. The bed of Astrolabe Glacier is near sea level and ends by a partially floating ice tongue that is ~8 km long and 600 m thick. This test site is used to evaluate the accuracy of WISE in Antarctica discussed in the following subsection.
Measurement accuracy
The theoretical vertical resolution of the 2.5 MHz WISE data is one-quarter of the wavelength, or 30 m in air and 17 m in ice. We assume a constant dielectric permittivity of 3.15 for ice and do not apply a snow/firn correction. In snow-covered regions, this means that ice thickness may be slightly underestimated, whereas in wet or ‘dusty’ ice regions, ice thickness may be slightly overestimated. Typically, the ice dielectric constant from field and laboratory measurements ranges from 3.0 to 3.25 (Reference Bogorodsky, Bentley and GudmandsenBogorodsky and others, 1985; Reference Macheret, Moskalevsky and VasilenkoMacheret and others, 1993), which corresponds to ±2% of the ice thickness or ±20 m for ice 1000 m thick. Another source of uncertainty is in the precision of the position of the airplane from GPS (~20m). As we usually use a surface elevation reference from an external DEM, additional uncertainties from these reference surfaces must be taken into account. These errors are nominally -5-10 m, but could be larger in regions of rapid thinning, such as Jakobshavn Isbræ, Greenland, which thins at a rate higher than 10ma-1 (Reference Thomas, Abdalati, Frederick, Krabill, Manizade and ManizadeThomas and others, 2003). Uncertainties in ice thickness also result from bed digitizing. In the case of WISE, the antenna pattern is very broad, and off-nadir reflections may be problematic, especially along narrow, steep-walled outlet glaciers found in Alaska or Patagonia. In such cases, identification of bed returns requires crossover analysis, comparison of the results with a mass-conservation approach (Reference Morlighem, Rignot, Seroussi, Larour, Dhia and DhiaMorlighem and others, 2011) or comparison with a simulation of the radar returns from the surface topography alone using a simple scattering model (Reference Nouvel, Herique, Kofman and KofmanNouvel and others, 2004; Reference Mouginot, Pommerol, Beck, Kofman and CliffordMouginot and others, 2010). Finalization of the bed digitization typically involves several iterations to converge toward a stable solution.
To determine the accuracy of the digitized ice thicknesses from WISE, we compare the results with MCoRDS data on Russell Glacier, central west Greenland, and the HiCARS data on Astrolabe Glacier, East Antarctica (Fig. 8). On Russell Glacier, liquid water is likely present at many levels within the ice substrate, as manifest by the presence of many supraglacial lakes (Reference McMillan, Nienow, Shepherd, Benham and BenhamMcMillan and others, 2007). In 2010 WISE and NASA OIB/MCoRDS conducted extensive grid surveys of this glacier, with track spacings of 3 km and 500 m, respectively. Figure 8 shows the distribution of the difference in ice thickness between the two instruments at the crossover points. The standard deviation of the difference is 55 m and the mean is -28 m. The mean difference could result from slight differences in surface reference. The standard deviation is consistent with the expected accuracy given the sources of error described above. In this region, the accuracy of the MCoRDS radar was estimated at ~34 m, by comparison with radar tomography (Reference Wu, Jezek, Rodriguez, Gogineni, Rodriguez-Morales and MoralesWu and others, 2011; Reference MorlighemMorlighem and others, 2013).
In East Antarctica, ice is not expected to include englacial meltwater, because it is colder and cleaner, and hence highly penetrative. We compare WISE with HiCARS over Astrolabe Glacier (Fig. 8). The standard deviation in ice-thickness difference is 25 m and the mean difference is 12 m. The level of performance measured in Greenland is likely more representative of the general capability of the system in challenging environments. A 50 m precision in thickness is, however, sufficient for many applications, especially considering that in several sectors discussed here higher-frequency sensors do not always provide bed returns and, where they do, the precision is - 3 0 m.
Conclusion
We have successfully retrieved ice-thickness measurements using the WISE 2–5MHz airborne radar sounder in Greenland and Antarctica during five campaigns between 2008 and 2010. We report measurements of ice thickness at the southern tip of Greenland, in the Qassimiut lobe, an area where probing at higher frequencies is difficult, proving the ability of the WISE system to measure ice thicknesses in a highly scattering environment. We note that this achievement was possible despite many technical and operational challenges of flying such a long-wavelength radar on a fixed-wing aircraft. Low-frequency radars are emerging to complement high-frequency radars, not only for temperate ice mapping but also for mapping areas traditionally considered as polar yet scattering, as is the case in southern Greenland. The WISE data from 2008–12 will be posted at the US National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) as part of NASA Operation IceBridge. Future developments for WISE include an upgrade of the PRF to 10 KHz. This will allow an increase in stacking by a factor of ten and therefore improve the signal-to-noise ratio by 10dB (Wright and others, 1994).
Acknowledgements
This work was performed at the Department of Earth System Science, University of California Irvine, and at the California Institute of Technology's Jet Propulsion Laboratory under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Cryospheric Science Program; and at the Laboratoire de Glaciologie et Geophysique de l’Environnement (LGGE) under a contract with the French polar institute, Institut Paul-Emile Victor (IPEV). The Antarctic program benefited from logistical support from the IPEV through the program DACOTA-ANR-06-VULN-016-01 (funded by the Agence Nationale pour la Recherche) and the program DACOTAIPEV-1053 (funded by the IPEV). Part of the development of WISE has been funded by NASA's Planetary Instruments Definition and Development Program (PIDDP). We thank the three reviewers, Steven Arcone, John Paden and Jie-Bang Yan, and the scientific editor, Sivaprasad Gogineni, for helpful and constructive comments on the manuscript.