Sea ice segmentation based on Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images has become an important technical means for polar climate change monitoring and navigation safety guarantee. However, the existing methods have limitations in the utilization of SAR polarization information and the modeling of local diversity details of sea ice, which leads to insufficient segmentation, especially in complex ice-water boundary regions. To address these issues, this paper proposes a novel Polarization-Fused Edge-Enhanced UNet (PFEE-UNet) designed specifically for sea ice segmentation from high-resolution SAR images. Specifically, we design the Cross-Polarization Channel Interaction (CPCI) module, which employs a dual interaction strategy of hierarchical inter-group cascading and symmetric cross-fusion. This approach effectively leverages the complementary features of the HH and HV polarization channels, significantly enhancing the distinction between sea ice and open water. Additionally, we present the Dense–Sparse Diversity Enhancement (DSDE) module, which combines a spatial-channel joint attention mechanism to strengthen the model’s ability to capture spatial relationships within complex ice–water structures, effectively alleviating misclassifications caused by abrupt local texture changes. Finally, we design the Selective Edge Fusion (SEF) module, which dynamically selects and integrates multi-level edge features, improving the continuity of sea ice boundaries and preserving its morphological integrity. The experimental results show that the proposed PFEE-UNet model outperforms mainstream segmentation methods on the AI4Arctic/ASIP sea ice dataset, achieving an average Intersection over Union (IoU) of 84.48%, which surpasses existing methods such as HRNet (82.52%) and DeepLabv3+ (82.40%). Additionally, PFEE-UNet was applied for end-to-end ice–water segmentation on real-world Sentinel-1 SAR scenes, demonstrating its effectiveness and robustness for practical sea ice monitoring.
Song et al. (Fri,) studied this question.