Special Issue Available
Remote Sensing of the Cryosphere
Volume 111, Issues 2-3 (30 November 2007)
Pp. 135-408
To access and download the issue, please see Volume 111, Issues 2-3 at:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00344257
For further information, please contact:
Marco Tedesco
E-mail: mtedesco [at] umbc.edu
A special issue of Remote Sensing of the Cryosphere on "Remote Sensing
of Environment" is currently in press and papers are now available online.
This special issue brings together a collection of papers highlighting
recent science, algorithm development, and validation results on remote
sensing of the Cryosphere.
The term Cryosphere is derived from the Greek word kryos, for cold, and
it describes the portions of the Earth where water is in frozen form.
These include sea-, lake- and river-ice, snow cover, glaciers, ice caps
and ice sheets, and frozen ground. The Cryosphere strongly affects the
global climate system influencing surface energy and moisture fluxes,
clouds, precipitation, hydrology, and atmospheric and oceanic
circulation.
Abstracts and full text articles are available for the following papers:
Using remote sensing data to develop seasonal outlooks for Arctic
regional sea-ice minimum extent; Sheldon D. DrobotOn detection of the thermophysical state of landfast first-year sea
ice using in-situ microwave emission during spring melt; Byong Jun
Hwang, Alexandre Langlois, David G. Barber and Timothy N. PapakyriakouCoincident high resolution optical-SAR image analysis for surface
albedo estimation of first-year sea ice during summer melt; Randall K.
Scharien, John J. Yackel, Mats A. Granskog and Brent G.T. ElseThe potential of satellite radar interferometry and feature tracking
for monitoring flow rates of Himalayan glaciers; Adrian Luckman, Duncan
Quincey and Suzanne BevanCombined airborne laser and radar altimeter measurements over the Fram
Strait in May 2002; K.A. Giles, S.W. Laxon, D.J. Wingham, D.W. Wallis,
W.B. Krabill, C.J. Leuschen, D. McAdoo, S.S. Manizade and R.K. RaneyBasal melting of A-38B: A physical model constrained by satellite
observations; Daniela Jansen, Michael Schodlok and Wolfgang RackPolar Radar for Ice Sheet Measurements (PRISM); Sivaprasad Gogineni,
David Braaten, Chris Allen, John Paden, Torry Akins, Pannir
Kanagaratnam, Ken Jezek, Glenn Prescott, Gunashekar Jayaraman, Vijaya
Ramasami, Cameron Lewis and David DunsonDetection of buried ice and sediment layers in permafrost using
multi-frequency Ground Penetrating Radar: A case examination on
Svalbard; Ola Brandt, Kirsty Langley, Jack Kohler and Svein-Erik HamranThe semi-analytical snow retrieval algorithm and its application to
MODIS data; M. Tedesco and A.A. KokhanovskyMODIS-based Mosaic of Antarctica (MOA) data sets: Continent-wide
surface morphology and snow grain size; T.A. Scambos, T.M. Haran, M.A.
Fahnestock, T.H. Painter and J. BohlanderADEOS-II/GLI snow/ice products - Part I: Scientific basis; Knut
Stamnes, Wei Li, Hans Eide, Teruo Aoki, Masahiro Hori and Rune StorvoldADEOS-II/GLI snow/ice products - Part II: Validation results using GLI
and MODIS data; Teruo Aoki, Masahiro Hori, Hiroki Motoyoshi, Tomonori
Tanikawa, Akihiro Hachikubo, Konosuke Sugiura, Teppei J. Yasunari, Rune
Storvold, Hans A. Eide, Knut Stamnes, Wei Li, Jens Nieke, Yukinori
Nakajima and Fumihiro TakahashiADEOS-II/GLI snow/ice products - Part III: Retrieved results; Masahiro
Hori, Teruo Aoki, Knut Stamnes and Wei LiNorthern Hemisphere five-year average (2000-2004) spectral albedos of
surfaces in the presence of snow: Statistics computed from Terra MODIS
land products; Eric G. Moody, Michael D. King, Crystal B. Schaaf,
Dorothy K. Hall and Steven PlatnickInversion of a passive microwave snow emission model for water
equivalent estimation using airborne and satellite data; M. Parde, K.
Goita and A. RoyerA parameterized multiple-scattering model for microwave emission from
dry snow; Lingmei Jiang, Jiancheng Shi, Saibun Tjuatja, Jeff Dozier,
Kunshan Chen and Lixin ZhangAssessment of spring snow cover duration variability over northern
Canada from satellite datasets; Ross Brown, Chris Derksen and Libo WangObservations and statistical analysis of combined active-passive
microwave space-borne data and snow depth at large spatial scales; M.
Tedesco and J. MillerIdentification of atmospheric influences on the estimation of snow
water equivalent from AMSR-E measurements; J.R. Wang and M. Tedesco
For further information, please contact:
Marco Tedesco
E-mail: mtedesco [at] umbc.edu