EGU2020-11904
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-11904
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Towards a Pan-European snow cover and melt extent product from Sentinel-1 SAR and Sentinel-3 SLSTR Data

Thomas Nagler1, Lars Keuris1, Helmut Rott1, Gabriele Schwaizer1, David Small2, Eirik Malnes3, Kari Luojus4, Sari Metsaemaeki5, and Simon Pinnock6
Thomas Nagler et al.
  • 1ENVEO IT GmbH, Innsbruck, Austria (thomas.nagler@enveo.at)
  • 2University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland (david.small@geo.uzh.ch)
  • 3NORCE Teknology / Earth Observation, Oslo, Norway (eima@norceresearch.no)
  • 4Finnish Meteorological Institute Helsinki, Finland (kari.luojus@fmi.fi)
  • 5Finnish Environment Institute, Helsinki, Finland (sari.metsamaki@ymparisto.fi)
  • 6ESA Climate Office, Harwell, United Kingdom (simon.pinnock@esa.int)

The synergistic use of data from different satellites of the Sentinel series offers excellent capabilities for generating high quality products on key parameters of the global climate system and environment. A main parameter for climate monitoring, hydrology and water management is the seasonal snow cover. In the frame of the ESA project SEOM S1-4-SCI Snow, led by ENVEO, we developed, implemented and tested a novel approach for mapping the total extent and melting areas of the seasonal snow cover by synergistically exploiting Sentinel-1 SAR and Sentinel-3 SLSTR data and apply these tools for snow monitoring over the Pan-European domain.

Whereas data of medium resolution optical sensors are used for mapping the total snow extent, data of the Copernicus Sentinel-1 mission in Interferometric Wide Swath (IW) mode at co- and cross-polarizations are used for mapping the extent of snowmelt areas applying change detection algorithms. In order to select an optimum procedure for retrieval of snowmelt area, we conducted round-robin experiments for various algorithms over different snow environments, including high mountain areas in the Alps and in Scandinavia, as well as lowland areas in Central Europe covered by grassland, agricultural plots, and forests. In mountain areas the tests show good agreement between snow extent products during the melting period derived from SAR data and from Sentinel-2 and Landsat-8 data. In lowlands ambiguities may arise from temporal changes in backscatter related to soil moisture and agricultural activities. Dense forest cover is a major obstacle for snow detection by SAR because the surface is masked by the canopy layer which is a major scattering source at C-band. Therefore, areas with dense forest cover are masked out. Based on this results we selected for the retrieval of snowmelt area a change-detection algorithm using dual-polarized backscatter data of S1 IW acquisitions. The algorithm applies multi-channel speckle filtering and data fusion procedures for exploiting VV- and VH-polarized multi-temporal ratio images. The binary SAR snowmelt extent product at 100 m grid size is combined with the Sentinel-3 SLSTR and MODIS snow products in order to obtain combined maps of total snow area and melting snow. The optical satellite images provide information on snow extent irrespective of melting state but are impaired by cloud cover. For generating a fractional snow extent product from MODIS and Sentinel-3 SLSTR data we apply multi-spectral algorithms for cloud screening, the discrimination of snow free and snow covered regions and the retrieval of fractional snow extent. In order to fill gaps in the optical snow extent time sequence due to cloud cover we apply a data assimilation procedure using a snow pack model driven by numerical meteorological data of ECMWF, simulating daily changes in the snow extent. We present the results of the Pan-European snow cover and melt extent product derived from optical and SAR data. The performance of this product is evaluated in different environments using independent validation data sets including in-situ snow and meteorological measurements, snow products from Sentinel-2 and Landsat images, as well as high resolution numerical meteorological data.

How to cite: Nagler, T., Keuris, L., Rott, H., Schwaizer, G., Small, D., Malnes, E., Luojus, K., Metsaemaeki, S., and Pinnock, S.: Towards a Pan-European snow cover and melt extent product from Sentinel-1 SAR and Sentinel-3 SLSTR Data, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-11904, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-11904, 2020

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