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The Extraction of InSAR Information from Imagery of a Wind-Blown Tree Canopy with a Ground-Based SAR. Keith Morrison & Muhammad Yasin Department of Aerospace, Power and Sensors, University of Cranfield, Shrivenham, UK &
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The Extraction of InSAR Information from Imagery of a Wind-Blown Tree Canopy with a Ground-Based SAR Keith Morrison & Muhammad Yasin Department of Aerospace, Power and Sensors, University of Cranfield, Shrivenham, UK & DLR, Institut für Hochfrequenztechnik und RadarsystemeWeßling, Germany
The GB-SAR System • Portable SAR / InSAR Imaging System • All-weather • L through X-band (1-12GHz) • Fully polarimetric VV,HH,VH,HV
Rationale • Particular open questions relate to the conditions under which PolInSAR produces accurate measurements of biomass, with respect to: • canopy structure (species, density, height distribution) • technical sensor specifications • imaging conditions (spatial and temporal)
Presentation Can the GB-SAR system be used to obtain meaningful PolInSAR measurements of forest canopies? Considerations GB-SAR imaging timescale on order of tens of minutes Can expect wind-induced target motion Can the results be related to air- and space-borne ?
Tree Dimensions • Trunk Height = 25m • Trunk diameter at DBH = 1.7m • Trunk Circumference at DBH = 5.6m • Maximum tree width (2m from ground) = 15m • Tree width at ¾ of tree height = 12 m • Maximum tree depth = 18m • Tree depth at ¾ of tree height = 11m
5m 9.6m 25m 14m
Radar Parameters SF-CW Radar Type 13th July 2005 Date of observation 4.000GHz Start frequency (GHz) 6.000GHz End frequency 1601 Number of frequencies per sweep 1.25MHz Frequency step interval 3000Hz VNA IF bandwidth +8dBm Effective transmit power at antenna VV Polarisation 20mm Aperture elemental sampling, dx 3680mm Aperture size, D 185 Number of aperture samples 1 or 8 Data averaging factor 9.6m Antenna height above ground 0.9s Tsweep, frequency sweep time 1.1s Tmove, antenna movement time
Scans 1-9. Av. Factor 1 Figure 4.1: The log-amplitude images of Scans (top to bo
Scans 10 & 11. Av Factor 8 Figure 4.2: The log-amplitude images of Scans 10 (top) and 11. The plots are 3-29m in rang
1/(1+SNR-1) InSAR Decorrelation γ = γNoise . γSpatial . γSystem.γTemporal
Coherence Analysis Figure 8.7: Coherence maps of (top left): Scans 2 & 3; (top right) Scans 8 & 9; (bottom left) Scans
Sim_1a vs Sim_1b Sim_1a vs Sim_2a
InSAR Phase vs Coherence The curves show the frequency of occurrence with phase for varying coherence ranges. The outermost curve is over the entire coherence range 0-1. The next innermost curve shows the distribution 0.1-1, then 0.2-1, and so on. The innermost curve shows the phase distribution 0.9-1.
Conclusions Investigation into whether the GB-SAR system can be used for InSAR & PolInSAR • Meaningful SAR Imaging of trees is feasible • Wind motion produces spreading of IPR into broadband unstructured azimuthal arcs • Good coherences obtained by observation in low wind conditions • Recovery of ‘static’ backscatter pattern by temporal averaging • Averaging also improves the coherence • However, latter might bias InSAR phase / height retrieval to stronger coherent features in canopy