Sea ice detection using concurrent multispectral and synthetic aperture radar imagery
Martin S J Rogers, Maria Fox, Andrew Fleming, Louisa van Zeeland,, Jeremy Wilkinson, and J. Scott Hosking

TL;DR
This paper introduces ViSual_IceD, a CNN-based tool that fuses multispectral and SAR imagery for improved sea ice detection, outperforming existing models and aiding in polar region monitoring.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel dual-encoder CNN architecture for concurrent multispectral and SAR data fusion, enhancing sea ice detection accuracy over traditional methods.
Findings
ViSual_IceD achieves 1.60% higher F1 score than comparable models.
The model effectively distinguishes sea ice using combined MSI and SAR data.
Outputs complement passive microwave sea ice concentration products.
Abstract
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery is the primary data type used for sea ice mapping due to its spatio-temporal coverage and the ability to detect sea ice independent of cloud and lighting conditions. Automatic sea ice detection using SAR imagery remains problematic due to the presence of ambiguous signal and noise within the image. Conversely, ice and water are easily distinguishable using multispectral imagery (MSI), but in the polar regions the ocean's surface is often occluded by cloud or the sun may not appear above the horizon for many months. To address some of these limitations, this paper proposes a new tool trained using concurrent multispectral Visible and SAR imagery for sea Ice Detection (ViSual\_IceD). ViSual\_IceD is a convolution neural network (CNN) that builds on the classic U-Net architecture by containing two parallel encoder stages, enabling the fusion and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamics
Methods*Communicated@Fast*How Do I Communicate to Expedia? · Max Pooling · Concatenated Skip Connection · Convolution · U-Net
