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Data Fusion for Reconstruction of a DTM, Under a Woodland Canopy, From Airborne L-band InSAR

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posted on 2009-06-17, 13:44 authored by Clare S. Rowland, Heiko Balzter
This paper investigates the utility of different parameters from polarimetric interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) data for the identification of ground pixels in a woodland area to enable accurate digital terrain model (DTM) generation from the InSAR height of the selected ground hit pixels. The parameters assessed include radar backscatter, interferometric coherence, surface scattering proportion (based on Freeman–Durden decomposition), and standard deviation of the interferometric height. The method is applied to Monks Wood, a small seminatural deciduous woodland in Cambridgeshire, U.K., using airborne E-SAR data collected in June 2000. The 1428 variations of SAR-derived terrain models are validated with theodolite data and a light detection and ranging-derived DTM. The results show that increasing the amount of data used in the DTM creation does not necessarily increase the accuracy of the final DTM. The most accurate method, for the whole wood, was a fixed-window minimum-filtering algorithm, followed by a mean filter. However, for a spatial subset of the area using the υ3 backscattering coefficient to identify ground pixels outperforms the minimum filtering method. The findings suggest that backscatter information may often be undervalued in estimating terrain height under forest canopies.

History

Citation

IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 2007, 45 (5), pp. 1154-1163.

Published in

IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

issn

0196-2892

Copyright date

2007

Available date

2009-06-17

Publisher version

http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/articleDetails.jsp?arnumber=4156340

Language

en

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