NASA's Gulfstream III #502 (83-0502) flies over the Edwards
range with the UAVSAR pod mounted underneath 3/6/07
Photo: NASA / Lori Losey |
4/30/2009 - EDWARDS AFB, CA – NASA will 'break the ice'
on a pair of new airborne radars that can help monitor climate
change when a team of scientists embarks this week on a two-month
expedition to the vast, frigid terrain of Greenland and Iceland.
Scientists from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena,
Calif., and Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif.,
will depart Dryden Friday, May 1, on a modified NASA Gulfstream
III aircraft. In a pod beneath the aircraft's fuselage will
be two JPL-developed radars that are flying test beds for evaluating
tools and technologies for future space-based radars. .
One of the radars, the L-band wavelength Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
Synthetic Aperture Radar, or UAVSAR, calibrates and supplements
satellite data; the other is a proof-of-concept Ka-band radar
called the Glacier and Land Ice Surface Topography Interferometer,
or GLISTIN.
Both radars use pulses of microwave energy to produce images
of Earth's surface topography and the deformations in it. UAVSAR
detects and measures the flow of glaciers and ice sheets, as
well as subtle changes caused by earthquakes, volcanoes, landslides
and other dynamic phenomena. GLISTIN will create high-resolution
maps of ice surface topography, key to understanding the stresses
that drive changes in glacial regions.
During this expedition, UAVSAR will study the flow of Greenland's
and Iceland's glaciers and ice streams, while GLISTIN will map
Greenland’s icy surface topography. About 97,000 square
miles (250,000 square kilometers) of land will be mapped during
110 hours of data collection.
"We hope to better characterize how Arctic ice is changing
and how climate change is affecting the Arctic, while gathering
data that will be useful for designing future radar satellites,"
said UAVSAR Principal Investigator Scott Hensley of JPL.
The UAVSAR collects data over areas of interest while the aircraft
flies at 41,000 feet (12,500 meters) altitude. The G-III then
flies over the same areas again, minutes to months later, using
precision navigation to fly within 15 feet (4.6 meters) of its
original flight path. By comparing the data from multiple passes,
scientists can detect subtle changes in Earth's surface.
L-band Principal Investigator Howard Zebker of Stanford University,
Palo Alto, Calif., and his team will use UAVSAR to collect data
on various types of ice. They will measure how deeply the L-band
radar penetrates the ice and compare it with similar C- and
X-band radar data collected from satellites. Scientists expect
the longer wavelengths of the L-band radar to penetrate deeper
into the ice than C-band radar, "seeing" ice motions
or structures hundreds of meters below the ice surface, rather
than only at the surface. By using both wavelengths, scientists
hope to obtain a more complete picture of how glaciers and ice
streams flow. Zebker's team will also evaluate how sensitive
the L-band radar is to changes in the ice surface between observations.
To better predict how glaciers and ice sheets will evolve,
scientists need to know what they're doing now, how fast they're
changing, what processes drive the changes and how to represent
them in models. Accurate measurements of ice sheet elevation
derived from laser altimeters (lidars) on aircraft or satellites
are critical to these efforts. But high-frequency microwave
radars can also do the job, with greater coverage and the ability
to operate in a wider range of weather conditions. Until now,
however, microwave radars operating at wavelengths longer than
those of GLISTIN have penetrated snow and ice more deeply than
lidars, making interpretation of their data more complex.
Enter GLISTIN, the first demonstration of millimeter-wave interferometry,
which was developed to support International Polar Year studies.
Principal Investigator Delwyn Moller of Remote Sensing Solutions,
Barnstable, Mass., and her team will evaluate GLISTIN's ability
to map ice surface topography. GLISTIN has two receiving antennas,
separated by about 10 inches (25 centimeters). This gives it
stereoscopic vision and the ability to simultaneously generate
both imagery and topographic maps. The topographic maps are
accurate to within 4 inches (10 centimeters of elevation on
scales comparable to the ground footprint of a lidar on a satellite.
Scientists expect GLISTIN to penetrate the snow and ice by
just centimeters, rather than by meters, as current microwave
radars do. A multi-institutional team will conduct coordinated
lidar and ground measurements to help quantify how deeply GLISTIN's
Ka-band radar penetrates the snow and ice and to verify model
predictions.
GLISTIN data will aid in designing future Earth ice topography
missions and even missions to map ice on other celestial bodies.
Scientists will also apply its data to designing missions to
map Earth's surface water and ocean topography.
A joint partnership of JPL and Dryden, UAVSAR evolved from
JPL's airborne synthetic aperture radar (AIRSAR) system that
flew on NASA's DC-8 aircraft in the 1990s. In 2004, NASA's Earth
Science Technology Office funded development of a more compact
version of AIRSAR to be flown on uninhabited aerial vehicles.
UAVSAR made its first operational flight in November 2008. JPL
is managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology
in Pasadena.
Source: NASA Press Release