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Satellite radar interferometry (SRI) provides an important new tool for determining ice-flow velocity. Interferometric measurements made from a single-track direction are sensitive only to a single component of the three-component velocity vector. Observations from along three different track directions would allow the full velocity vector to be determined. A north/south-looking synthetic aperture radar (SAR) could provide these observations over large portions of the globe, but not over large areas of the polar ice sheets. The authors develop and demonstrate a technique that allows the three-component velocity vector to be estimated from data acquired along two track directions (ascending and descending) under a surface-parallel flow assumption. This technique requires that there are accurate estimates of the surface slope, which are also determined interferometrically. To demonstrate the technique, the authors estimate the three-component velocity field for the Ryder Glacier, Greenland. Their results are promising, although they do not have yet ground-truth data with which to determine the accuracy of their estimates.
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Ian Joughin
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
R. Kwok
University of Washington
M. A. Fahnestock
University of Alaska Fairbanks
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing
California Institute of Technology
University of Maryland, College Park
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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Joughin et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a20dba434bef10fdaeb12aa — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/36.655315
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