PSInSAR Algorithm Improvement Using Amplitude Dispersion Index Optimization of Sentinel1-A Dual-Polarimetric
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S. Azadnezhad , Y. Maghsoudi * |
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Abstract: (3394 Views) |
- Introduction
Persistent Scatterer Interferometry (PSI) is a technique to detect and analysis of a network of coherent pixels referred as Permanent/Persistent scatterer (PS) which are stable throughout time-series of SAR images. This technique has been applied to monitor and measure phenomena such as earth subsidence fault movements and earthquake volcanic activity and other geological and environmental studies. In all PSI techniques, the processing is carried out only on the PS pixels. Therefore, high density and phase quality of these pixels are the most effective factors on the results of these techniques. The main challenge of this technique is to detect the coherent pixels over non-urban areas which suffer from the temporal decorrelation.
Nowdays and with the development of polarimetric SAR sensors, polarimetric radar data are available. Polarimetric data consist of several conventional SAR acquisitions, usually addressed as channels. Each channel in a PolSAR acquisition is sensitive to different geometric characteristics of the scene. This additional redundancy over the scene may allow to increase both quality and density of the PS pixels. Therefore, the combination of polarimetry and interferometry enables to improve the effectiveness of PSI techniques, especially in non-urban areas.
In this paper, we employ a method to improve the conventional PSInSAR algorithm for detecting PSC by using polarimetric optimization method on dual-pol SAR data. The improvement of this research is based on minimizing ADI criterion by means of an Exhaustive Search Polarimetric Optimization method to increase the number of PSCs.
- Materials & Methods
2.1 Dataset Description
The proposed method is tested using a dataset of 17 dual-pol SAR data (VV/VH) acquired by Sentinel1-A satellite March 2017 and October 2017.
2.2 Polarimetric SAR Interferometry
A general formulation for polarimetric SAR interferometry was proposed in (Cloude & Papathanassiou, 1997). The scattering matrix S represents the polarimetric information associated to each pixel of the scene. Considering a monostatic configuration, the scattering matrix S is defined as follows:
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