Introduction
Ice surface topography is of considerable interest, since surface height determines ice volumes; change in height with time determines net mass balances; the direction of surface slope is the same as ice-flow direction; surface slope and depth determines total shear, and surface undulation is controlled by bottom topography and the physical properties of ice.
The first satellite-based (Geos-3, 1975) topography measurement (Reference Brooks, Campbell, Ramseier, Stanley and ZwallyBrooks and others, 1978) was a revolution. Now, it is possible to map the ice surface on a “global” scale, with all coordinates referenced to a common geocentric coordinate system. Although the first estimate of the accuracy (2 m) was too optimistic, these early results were a significant improvement. As the orbit of Geos-3 just reached 65°N, only South Greenland was mapped. Seasat, which contained an improved altimeter, was launched in 1978. As the orbit reached 72°N, the major part of the Greenland Ice Cap was mapped with hitherto unseen precision (Reference Brenner, Bindschadler, Thomas and ZwallyZwally and others 1983; Reference ZwallyZwally 1984). The re-producibility of these measurements was demonstrated to be better than I m on a smooth and horizontal ice surface in Central Greenland, near the ice divide. In fact, the reproducibility was close to the height of a sastruga.
It is more difficult to estimate the error on a sloping and undulated surface. First, the satellite is 800 km above the surface and it emits a relatively wide-angled radar signal. Therefore, the satellite “sees” the point on the surface closest to the satellite and not the point directly below (Reference Brenner, Bindschadler, Thomas and ZwallyThomas and others 1983). This introduces a slope induced error (Reference Brenner, Bindschadler, Thomas and ZwallyBrenner and others 1983). Next, the altimeter was designed to measure ocean wave properties. On an ice sheet surface, with faster changes in distance between surface and satellite, the altimeter frequently runs “off scale”. Although this error could be corrected for, the actual ice surface may create radar signal returns that, at times, make it difficult to identify the first return signal from the surface (Reference Martin, Zwally, Brenner and BindschadlerMartin and others 1983). Absolute precision has been estimated from comparison with “geoceiver fixes” (Reference BrooksBrooks 1982).
The correction applied to the raw Seasat measurements is here verified on a sloping and undulated surface in South Greenland. The result is that the reproducibility of the measurements is almost as good as that from the smooth horizontal Central Greenland surface. The absolute level of the distance measurements is correct within the accuracy of the surface; however, the wide footprint of the radar beam prevents details of surface topography from being resolved.
Measurement of the Greenland Ice Sheet surface elevation
Until recently, only sparse and incompatible measurements of the surface topography of the Greenland Ice Sheet existed. As the survey had to be carried out on the surface, it was associated with high cost, in terms of money, equipment, and labour. Consequently, most surface measurements were made barometrically. Although these measurements are reproducible within a few meters, the absolute height of the surface varies in the order of 100 m. A few, high-precision traverses have been performed, most noticeably along the EGIG track (Reference MälzerMalzer 1964; Reference SeckelSeckel 1977). Although these measurements are accurate within 3 m, they are restricted to a line, with little spatial coverage. These measurements were, in principle, above mean sea level.
In 1972, the first geoceiver measurement on the Greenland Ice Sheet was made by Reference MockMock (1976). In the geoceiver measurement, the location of the observer is determined relative to the US TRANSIT satellites, using the doppler shift of the satellites. A typical measurement takes 4 days, while 40 selected satellite passes are recorded. Later, if the precise satellite emphemeris can be obtained from DMATHC, an accuracy of about 1 m in latitude and longitude and 2 m in height can be obtained. These coordinates are defined by a geocentric, global, coordinate system and do not relate to some local system (e.g. mean sea level). The geocentric, coordinate system has its origin in the earth center of mass, Z-axis along the mean rotation axis and X-Z plane through Greenwich. The XYZ coordinates of the observer are frequently converted to latitude, longitude, and height above a reference ellipsoid. In this work, the ellipsoid used is WGS-72 (a=6 378 135 m, f=298.26). The difference between the ellipsoid and mean sea level is the geoid height; thus, if a surface has been measured both by levelling and geoceiver fixes, the difference between these two sets of measurements is the geoid height.
If the precise satellite ephemeris is not available, one or more receivers, operating simultaneously at a fixed position, may serve as references. If the distance between the receivers is not too great – some hundred kilometers – the accuracy will be better than the one obtained from the position calculated from the precise ephemeris. The parameter measured, however, is not the geodetic position of the observer, but the distance to the reference position.
Seasat measurements
The Seasat satellite measured the ice-surface elevation, using a radar sounder. Before the sounder readings can be interpreted in terms of surface elevation, a number of corrections and considerations must be applied:
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1. Orbit height. As the altimeter measures the distance from satellite to the ice surface, the satellite orbit must be known, in order to calculate surface elevation.
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2. Surface slope. In the case of a sloping plane, the surface directly below the satellite is 6H = 0.5 x Hα2 below the surface determined by the satellite altimeter (Reference Brenner, Bindschadler, Thomas and ZwallyBrenner and others 1983), H is the satellite altitude (800 km) and α the surface slope in radians.
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3. Along-track averaging. The return signal waveform is the average of 100 samples over a 662 m distance, thus the along-track resolution is 662 m.
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4. Waveform retracking. The return pulse shape over an ice sheet is significantly more complicated than that over the ocean. The reason is that several points on the ice may have the same distance to the satellite. As a result, the distance measuring equipment (tracker) in the satellite may not be able to follow the surface. As long as the tracker is locked onto the surface echo, this error can be corrected for by fitting a single or double ramp waveform to the return pulse shape (Reference Martin, Zwally, Brenner and BindschadlerMartin and others 1983). The resultant range error is estimated to the decimeter level.
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5. Surface penetration. Cold firn allows the radar signal to penetrate the snow. As a result, a radar return may be obtained not just from the air-firn transition, but also from features below the surface, e.g. melt layers. The retracking algorithm used should reduce the risk of following a wrong surface.
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6. Atmospheric pressure. The atmosphere introduces a delay of the radar signal corresponding to a few meters. Using a correction depending on surface elevation, the error may be reduced to around 10 cm.
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7. Geoid and solid earth tide. The satellite orbit is known in a coordinate system, with origin in the earth center of mass. If surface elevation is wanted above mean sea level, the geoid must be known. The estimated error of the geoid is around 2 m on the ice cap.
The resulting accuracy of the Seasat surface is difficult to estimate, even when excluding geoid errors, as this is not really an error, but a question of the coordinate system used. Under favourable circumstances, the noise of the range measurement itself is 25 cm and orbit errors 1.6 m (Reference Brenner, Bindschadler, Thomas and ZwallyZwally and others 1983). On a normal ice cap, with slopes and undulations, the error due to these surface irregularities will completely dominate the other errors, even after correcting for mean surface slope.
Surface measurement near Dve-3
August 1981 was the end of the 3 year Greenland Ice Sheet Program (GISP) deep drilling, which resulted in recovery of a 2037.6 m deep ice core (Reference DansgaardDansgaard and others 1982). The drilling took place in South Greenland, 600 m from the Dye-3 radar station (65°N, 44°w, h = 2480 m). The Dye-3 position was selected for logistic reasons; glaciologically, it was not considered the most favourable site. The accumulation is relatively high (55 cm of ice equivalent per year). Occasional summer melting changes ice properties and the site receives a complicated precipitation pattern from both sides of the ice divide, located 30 km to the West. Furthermore, the glacier is here resting on a mountainous bed (Reference Overgaard, Gundestrup, Langway, Oeschger and DansgaardOvergaard and Gundestrup 1985), which complicates the ice flow. In order to correct the information from the deep core for local effects, a program has been initiated upstream of Dye-3. This includes a number of ice cores (5 m to 175 m deep), temperature profiles, ice surface velocities, ice thickness, and surface topography. The reasons for measuring surface topography are that surface slope is the “driving force” for ice flow and that undulation creates changes in accumulation and temperature. Undulations are caused by subglacial mountains. They are consequently indications of complicated ice flow and the magnitude of the undulations is indicative of ice properties in the deeper strata (Reference Dahl-JensenDahl-Jensen 1985; Reference Gundestrup and HansenGundestrup and Hansen 1984). Ice thickness and surface topography are of primary interest, whereas the absolute level of the surface is of minor importance for this work. Consequently, the survey was performed barometrically using a reference barometer at a nearby fixed position to correct for barometric pressure changes. The absolute level of the surface is adjusted to several geoceiver fixes in the area. Thus the resulting surface (Figure 1) is in the coordinate system used by the satellites.
In Figure 1, all surface elevation measurements are marked with a small dot, and geoceiver fixes with a ⊗. The Seasat crossings in the western part of the map are marked with an open circle. The maps are based on a computer-generated color map (Uniras), using a pixel size of 400 x 400 m and some degree of smoothing. Input data are barometric measurements, geoceiver fixes and Seasat elevation measurement. Close to point 16B, 3 Seasat tracks cross 5 lines of surface measurements. This area is expanded in Figure 2. Again, this map is based on a “Uniras” map, using smoothing and a pixel size of 250 x 250 m. The input data are barometric measurements and 3 geoceiver fixes, mainly following the OSU strain-net (Reference Whillans, Jezek, Drew and GundestrupWhillans and others 1984), In addition to the general surface slope, which runs south-west to north-east, several undulations with an amplitude of 20 m and a wavelength of 5 km can be seen The surface topography resembles Reference McIntyre and DrewryMcIntyre and Drewry (1984) type 2, but with a smaller wavelength. The surface is compared with the Seasat range measurement.
How accurate?
The barometers used are Thomsen type 3B4. They have a reproducibility of 1 m. The accuracy of the geoceiver has been checked close to Dye-3 at a fixed point. This station was remeasured in 1972, 1980, 1981 and 1983 (Reference Reeh and GundestrupReeh and Gundestrup 1985). The result is that latitude and longtitude have a standard deviation of 0.7 m; height 1.6 m. These figures have been verified by re-measuring station 16B in 1981, 1983 and 1984. The error in altitude is higher than m longitude and latitude because residual, ionospheric etfects create a bias in altitude.
In summary, the standard error of the surface in Figure 2 can be estimated as 2 m.
Comparison with Seasat
Three Seasat tracks pass Figure 2, revolutions 1193, 1236 and 1279. In Figure 3, the non-slope-corrected Seasat altitude is compared with the sub-satellite surface, measured barometrically and by geoceiver. Although the satellite shows good reproducibility (1.6 m), errors as high as 20 m are noted. Part of this error can be removed by a suitable slope correction, but the finer details of the surface are lost.
The surface topography (Figure 2) is used to calculate the point on the surface closest to Seasat and the distance from Seasat to this point. The distance is then converted to an apparent surface elevation, i.e. the surface elevation that Seasat should have measured over this surface. Figure 4 shows this elevation compared with the actual measured surface and the real ice surface, for revolution 1236. The calculated and the observed elevation compares favourably, for the 3 passes, the difference being 1.6 m ± 2.5 m compared with 11 m ± 4.7 m between measured and actual surface. The difference of 1.6 ± 2.5 m is in agreement with the 1.6 m accuracy over an ideal horizontal surface, the accuracy of the range measurement with corrections being slightly degraded.
On Figure 2, lines are drawn from the Seasat subsatellite point to the point closest to the satellite. The Seasat beam locks onto hills on the surface and the area between hills is not measured. A similar effect, on a larger scale, has been observed on ice shelf edges (Thomas and others’ 1984).
Conclusion
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1. Techniques for retracking radar altimeter data, as described in Reference Martin, Zwally, Brenner and BindschadlerMartin and others (1983) and for correcting for slope-induced errors, as described in Reference Brenner, Bindschadler, Thomas and ZwallyBrenner and others (1983), are verified by 3-dimensional surface measurement of topography.
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2. The altimeter tends to lock on to hills or rises in the vicinity of the sub-satellite track and to jump from one hill to another. The terrain between the hills cannot be resolved.
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3. Although the elevations overestimate the true surface elevation, a similar altimeter would make a similar overestimate, allowing an accurate differential measurement of volume change between the two surveys (Reference Griffiths, Guyenne and HuntGriffiths 1984).
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4. Even on a sloping and undulating surface, the Seasat range measurement is accurate to the level of the geoceiver determined surface (2 m).