Farooq URack WMcDonald AHowell S2021-01-152021-01-152020Farooq U, Rack W, McDonald A, Howell S (2020). Long-term analysis of sea ice drift in the western Ross sea, Antarctica, at high and low spatial resolution. Remote Sensing. 12(9). 1402-1402.2072-4292https://hdl.handle.net/10092/101462© 2020 by the authors. The Ross Sea region, including three main polynya areas in McMurdo Sound, Terra Nova Bay, and in front of the Ross Ice Shelf, has experienced a significant increase in sea ice extent in the first four decades of satellite observations. Here, we use Co-Registration of Optically Sensed Images and Correlation (COSI-Corr) to estimate 894 high-resolution sea ice motion fields of the Western Ross Sea in order to explore ice-atmosphere interactions based on sequential high-resolution Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar (ASAR) images from the Envisat satellite acquired between 2002-2012. Validation of output motion vectors with manually drawn vectors for 24 image pairs show Pearson correlation coefficients of 0.92 ± 0.09 with a mean deviation in direction of-3.17 ± 6.48 degrees. The high-resolution vectors were also validated against the Environment and Climate Change Canada sea ice motion tracking algorithm, resulting in correlation coefficients of 0.84 ± 0.20 and the mean deviation in the direction of-0.04 ± 17.39 degrees. A total of 480 one-day separated velocity vector fields have been compared to an available NSIDC low-resolution sea ice motion vector product, showing much lower correlations and high directional differences. The high-resolution product is able to better identify short-term and spatial variations, whereas the low-resolution product underestimates the actual sea ice velocities by 47% in this important near-coastal region. The large-scale pattern of sea ice drift over the full time period is similar in both products. Improved image coverage is still desired to capture drift variations shorter than 24 h.enAll rights reserved unless otherwise statedsea icemotion trackingEnvisat ASARPolar PathfinderNSIDCWestern Ross SeaSynthetic Aperture RadarCOSI-CorrLong-term analysis of sea ice drift in the western Ross sea, Antarctica, at high and low spatial resolutionJournal Article2020-11-080203 Classical Physics0406 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience0909 Geomatic EngineeringFields of Research::37 - Earth sciences::3709 - Physical geography and environmental geoscience::370901 - Geomorphology and earth surface processesFields of Research::40 - Engineering::4013 - Geomatic engineering::401304 - Photogrammetry and remote sensinghttp://doi.org/10.3390/RS12091402