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News Understanding snow in depth – ESA paves the way
An ESA campaign carried out in Austria has demonstrated how snow, a key component in the Earth's water cycle and important source of fresh water, can be measured from space using radar. The campaign supports one of the main objectives of the candidate Earth Explorer CoReH2O. Cold Regions Hydrology High-Resolution Observatory(CoReH2O) is one of six candidate Earth Explorer missions that has just completed an assessment study and will be presented to the science community at a User Consultation Meeting in January 2009. Subsequently, up to three of the missions will be selected for the next stage of development (feasibility study), leading to the eventual launch of ESA's seventh Earth Explorer mission around 2016.
In addition, snow and ice are important sources of fresh water with more than one-sixth of the Earth's population relying on seasonal snow packs and glaciers for their main supply. Decreasing snow and ice cover, due to a changing climate, will affect fresh water resources and consequently impact such things as human health, regional food security and biodiversity.
To ensure that this concept would work from space, a number of experimental campaigns have been carried out to simulate the measuring technique. One such campaign – HeliSnow-2008 – was carried out in two separate one-week operations in the Austrian Alps earlier this year.
The HeliSnow-2008 campaign was aimed at the validation and advancement of theoretical backscatter models and inversion algorithms for a wide range of different snow conditions. To achieve this, the Multi3Scat backscatter measurements were supported by detailed measurements of the physical properties of snow at several field stations. As well as measuring the depth of the snow layer, the snow was painstakingly characterised by grain size, density and shape.
The HeliSnow-2008 campaign complements an earlier campaign carried out in 2007 called SARAlps, where Ku-band and X-band backscatter data of snow had been measured with a ground-based SAR over two sites in the Austrian Alps.
The large amount of data from both campaigns is expected to generate considerable interest since a complete remote-sensing dataset and simultaneously acquired ground data provide a valuable reference. Now that the dataset has been fully analysed it will soon be made available to the scientific community through ESA.
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