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Biomass Estimation by Means of Sentinel-3 Data: A Sensitivity Analysis

Authors :
Marco Restano
Davide Comite
Jérôme Benveniste
Giuseppina De Felice-Proia
Nazzareno Pierdicca
Maria Paola Clarizia
Leila Guerriero
Source :
Microwave Remote Sensing: Data Processing and Applications.
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SPIE, 2021.

Abstract

Sentinel-3 is a multi-instrument mission designed to measure sea-surface topography, sea- and land-surface temperature, ocean color and land color with high resolution and accuracy. The S3 mission is based on a constellation of two (3A and 3B) polar-orbiting satellites and it is designed and operated in the framework of the Copernicus programme, with planned 3C and 3D to ensure continuity. The mission builds up the legacy of ERS-1, ERS-2, ENVISAT and particularly CryoSat for the altimeter. Seninel-3A was launched in February 2016 and Seninel-3B in April 2018. They are equipped with a dual-frequency (Ku- and C-band) altimeter and can work both in low resolution (LRM) and SAR mode, the latter being designed to achieve high along-track discrimination. The low-resolution mode exploits conventional pulse-limited altimeter operation at C band. To approximate LRM operation at Ku band, a pseudo low-resolution mode is achieved by properly processing SAR acquisitions. Recently, a new research project funded by the European Space Agency, i.e., ALtimetry for BIOMass (ALBIOM), has been initiated to study the possibility of deriving forest biomass using Sentinel-3 altimetry data. ALBIOM aims at improving biomass global dataset, which is defined and classified as an Essential Climate Variable. In the last two decades, the exploitation of radar altimetry for studying land parameters has received renewed interest, including processing for the characterization of vegetation features and soil moisture. The vegetation cover has two main effects on the nadir backscatter measured by the altimeter. It attenuates the coherent reflection of the soil and add an incoherent volume scattering contribution. The relative weight of the two contributions depends of course form the frequency. To assess in what extent radar altimetry data are sensitive to the presence of vegetation forest, a study of the dynamic of the Sentinel-3 power waveforms with respect to the above ground biomass is needed. More importantly, the way radar waveforms are affected by disturbing land parameters, such as soil moisture, topography and surface roughness, has to be understood. In this work, an analysis considering both high- and low-resolution data made available by the Copernicus hub service is carried out. The sensitivity study of Sentinel-3 altimetry data to forest biomass over Africa is based on calibrated Sentinel-3 waveforms combined in space and time with forest biomass maps and ancillary information on the soil topography derived from a Digital Elevation Model. Comparison among Ku- and C-band waveforms are discussed, highlighting the critical aspect of the correct positioning of the time-tracking window over land, which often appears partly or completely misplaced, determining waveforms either truncated or containing noise only. The detrimental effect of the waveform truncation for the estimation of biomass and the possible mitigation approach has been considered. The study revealed that both waveforms and NRCSs can be sensitive to the presence of biomass in the order of 100-400 tons/ha, even if they can be strongly influenced by the presence of irregular topography within the system footprint. Different sensitivities with respect to the three channels (i.e., bandwidths and resolution modes) have been observed. A study about the use of differential NRCSs, defined as the difference between two different bandwidths, proposed by previous studies, is under investigation. Further research activities also connected to a modelling approach are in progress and will be discussed at the conference.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Microwave Remote Sensing: Data Processing and Applications
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2557851a3f9fc5a3a5b8b03fe7298247
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2600230