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Robust Multiseasonal Ice Classification From High-Resolution X-Band SAR

Karl Kortum, Suman Singha, Gunnar Spreen

2022IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Automated solutions for sea ice-type classification from synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery offer an opportunity to monitor sea ice, unimpeded by cloud cover or the arctic night. However, there is a common struggle to obtain accurate classifications year round, particularly in the melt and freeze-up seasons. During these seasons, the radar backscatter signal is affected by wet snow cover, obscuring information about underlying ice types. By using additional spatiotemporal contextual data and a combination of convolutional neural networks and a dense conditional random field, we can mitigate these problems and obtain a single classifier that is able to classify accurately at 3.5-m spatial resolution for five different classes of sea ice surface from October to May. During the near year-long drift of the Multidisciplinary Drifting Observatory for the Study of the Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) expedition, we collected satellite scenes of the same patch of Arctic pack ice with X-band SAR with a revisit time of less than a day on average. Combined with <italic xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">in situ</i> observations of the local ice properties, this offers up the unprecedented opportunity to perform a detailed and quantitative assessment of the robustness of our classifier for level, deformed, and heavily deformed ice. For these three classes, we can perform accurate classification with a probability >95% and calculate a lower bound for the robustness between 85% and 88%.

Topics & Concepts

Sea iceRemote sensingArcticSynthetic aperture radarSnowArctic ice packGeologyConvolutional neural networkRobustness (evolution)RadarArtificial intelligenceRandom forestComputer scienceMeteorologyClimatologyGeographyOceanographyGeomorphologyTelecommunicationsGeneChemistryBiochemistryArctic and Antarctic ice dynamicsCryospheric studies and observationsClimate change and permafrost