Gangotri glacier dynamics from multi-sensor SAR and optical data

Praveen Kumar Thakur*, Anukesh Krishnankutty Ambika, Sanjay M. Bisht, Alfred Stein, Anirudha Mahagaonkar, Uday Kumar, Vaibhav Garg, Varun Khajuria, Arpit Chouksey, Snehmani, Prakash Chauhan, S. P. Aggarwal

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

The present study has analyzed dynamics of Gangotri glacier using multiple remote sensing (RS) datasets and ground based observations. Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) data pairs from European Remote Sensing satellite (ERS 1/2) tandem pair for spring of 1996, Sentinel-1 SAR pairs and Japanese's Advance Land Observation System (ALOS) PALSAR-2 SAR data for Spring of 2015 were used to derive glacier-surface velocity at seasonal time scale using Differential InSAR (DInSAR) techniques. Bi-static TanDEM-X (Experimental) data was used for the 1st time to estimate glacier surface elevation changes for a period of 22, 44, 88 days during summer of 2012 using InSAR techniques in this study. Annual glacier velocity was also estimated using temporal panchromatic data of LANDSAT-5 (30 m), LANDSAT-7/8 (15 m), Sentinel-2 (10 m) and Indian Remote Sensing Satellite IRS-1C/1D panchromatic (5 m) data during 1998–2019 with feature tracking approach. This study has estimated glacier surface velocity and surface elevation changes for the major parts of Gangotri glacier and its tributary glaciers using medium to high resolution optical and SAR datasets, at annual and seasonal time scale, which is an improvement over earlier studies, wherein snout based glacier recession or only main glacier velocities were reported. The velocity and slope were used to assess glacier-ice thickness distribution using Glabtop-2, slope dependent and laminar flow based methods over the Gangotri group of glaciers. The estimated ice thickness was estimated in the range of 58–550 m for the complete glacier while few small areas in middle & upper regions carry higher thickness of about 607 m. The estimated glacier-ice thickness was found in the range of 58–67 m at the snout region. The estimation was validated using 2014 field measurements from Terrestrial Laser Scanner (TLS) for the first time and correlation was found to be 0.799 at snout of the glacier.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)309-326
Number of pages18
JournalAdvances in space research
Volume72
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jul 2023

Keywords

  • Elevation changes
  • Gangotri glacier
  • IRS
  • Landsat
  • Sentinel-1
  • Tandem-x
  • ITC-ISI-JOURNAL-ARTICLE
  • ITC-HYBRID
  • 2024 OA procedure

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