Applied Sciences (Nov 2024)
Enhanced Wide-Area Glacier Velocity Monitoring in Svalbard via Synthetic Aperture Radar Offset Tracking Noise Suppression
Abstract
Glacier movement is an important indicator of climate change, reflecting the quality and state changes in glacier migration and mass balance in the context of global warming. Although accurately estimating glacier surface flow velocity is crucial for various applications, achieving this is challenging due to factors such as low temporal correlation and high noise effects. This paper presents the pixel offset tracking (POT) technology based on Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data for glacier velocity monitoring, with enhanced cross-correlation matching window and noise suppression approaches. In particular, a noise suppression optimization method and a matching window optimization index suitable for wide-area glacier velocity monitoring are proposed. The inter-annual wide-area two-dimensional plane flow velocity of glaciers in the Svalbard archipelago was obtained by using a total of seven Sentinel-1 data sets from two orbits covering the entire Svalbard archipelago in 2021. The results indicate that 25 large glaciers in Svalbard destabilized in 2021, with a peak flow velocity of 6.18 m/day. At the same time, the influence of climate, topography, and other factors on glacier surface velocity is discussed. The wide-area glacier velocity monitoring method and its application demonstrated in this paper will serve as a valuable reference for studying glacier migration in the Arctic Svalbard archipelago and for other large-scale wide-area deformation monitoring efforts.
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