학술논문

Polarimetric Optimization of Temporal Sublook Coherence for DInSAR Applications
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters IEEE Geosci. Remote Sensing Lett. Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters, IEEE. 12(1):87-91 Jan, 2015
Subject
Geoscience
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Signal Processing and Analysis
Synthetic aperture radar
Interferometry
Coherence
Remote sensing
Optimization methods
Differential synthetic aperture radar interferometry (DInSAR)
ground-based synthetic aperture radar (GB-SAR)
polarimetric optimization
polarimetric differential synthetic aperture radar interferometry (PolDInSAR)
temporal sublook coherence (TSC)
Language
ISSN
1545-598X
1558-0571
Abstract
The application of differential synthetic aperture radar interferometry (DInSAR) techniques has been traditionally limited to the single-polarimetric case. The launch of satellites with polarimetric capabilities has triggered the synergy between polarimetric and interferometric algorithms, leading to a significant improvement in final DInSAR products. During the last years, the different polarimetric optimization techniques available have been successfully applied to the so-called classical phase quality estimators, i.e., the coherence and the amplitude dispersion estimators. In this context, a new estimator to evaluate the pixels' phase quality, referred to as temporal sublook coherence (TSC), has recently demonstrated to provide promising results in DInSAR applications. The nature of this estimator, which is based on exploiting the spectral properties of pointlike scatterers through the coherence evaluation of different sublooks of the image spectrum, allows its adaptation to the existing polarimetric optimization methods. This letter presents the benefits of extending the TSC estimator to work with fully polarimetric data. For this purpose, a fully polarimetric data set consisting of ten X-band ground-based SAR (GB-SAR) images is employed. The final DInSAR results obtained by means of TSC polarimetric optimization are compared with the ones obtained with its classical single-polarimetric approach, achieving up to more than a twofold increase in the pixels' density.