Arrow leftBack to Explore

Instrument

UAF HF Radar Sounder
University of Alaska Fairbanks High-Frequency Radar Sounder

The UAF High-Frequency (HF) Radar Sounder is an airborne radar sounder operated by the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF). It is an ice-penetrating radar sounder that is used for mapping ice thickness. It has an along-track spacing of approximately 10 m and vertical resolution in ice of 40 m. The UAF HF Sounder operates at 2 MHz and can measure ice up to 1,200 m thick.

NASA's DC-8 flying laboratory passes Antarctica's tallest peak, Mount Vinson, on Oct. 22, 2012, during a flight over the continent to measure changes in the massive ice sheet and sea ice. Credit: NASA/Michael Studinger (Photography courtesy NASA Images)

Instrument Details

Radar
Earth Science > Cryosphere > Snow/ice > Ice Depth/thickness
Earth Science > Climate Indicators > Cryospheric Indicators > Glacial Measurements > Glacier/ice Sheet Thickness
Earth Science > Climate Indicators > Cryospheric Indicators > Ice Depth/thickness
Earth Science > Spectral/engineering > Radar
Earth Science > Spectral/engineering > Radar > Radar Imagery
Land Surface
N/A
10 m, 40 m
2 MHz
Currently unavailble
Logo for Operation IceBridge
IceBridge

Operation IceBridge

2009—2021
Greenland, Antarctica, Alaska, Arctic Sea
view all deployment dates
37 Deployments
· 79 Data Products

Filter data products from this instrument by specific campaigns, platforms, or formats.

Campaigns
CAMPAIGNS
Platforms
PLATFORMS
Formats
FORMATS
10.5067/Q0AVPHN3250HExternal Link