Back to Search Start Over

Performance Analysis of Satellite Missions for Multi-temporal SAR Interferometry

Authors :
Guido Pasquariello
Antonella Belmonte
Davide Oscar Nitti
Alberto Refice
Fabio Bovenga
Maria Teresa Chiaradia
Raffaele Nutricato
Source :
Sensors (Basel) 18 (2018): 1–16. doi:10.3390/s18051359, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Fabio Bovenga 1, Antonella Belmonte 1, Alberto Refice 1, Guido Pasquariello 1, Raffaele Nutricato 2, Davide O. Nitti 2,Maria T. Chiaradia 3/titolo:Performance Analysis of Satellite Missions for Multi-temporal SAR Interferometry/doi:10.3390%2Fs18051359/rivista:Sensors (Basel)/anno:2018/pagina_da:1/pagina_a:16/intervallo_pagine:1–16/volume:18, Sensors (Basel, Switzerland), Sensors, Vol 18, Iss 5, p 1359 (2018), Sensors; Volume 18; Issue 5; Pages: 1359
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI), Basel, 2018.

Abstract

Multi-temporal InSAR (MTI) applications pose challenges related to the availability of coherent scattering from the ground surface, the complexity of the ground deformations, atmospheric artifacts, and visibility problems related to ground elevation. Nowadays, several satellite missions are available providing interferometric SAR data at different wavelengths, spatial resolutions, and revisit time. A new and interesting opportunity is provided by Sentinel-1, which has a spatial resolution comparable to that of previous ESA C-band sensors, and revisit times improved by up to 6 days. According to these different SAR space-borne missions, the present work discusses current and future opportunities of MTI applications in terms of ground instability monitoring. Issues related to coherent target detection, mean velocity precision, and product geo-location are addressed through a simple theoretical model assuming backscattering mechanisms related to point scatterers. The paper also presents an example of a multi-sensor ground instability investigation over Lesina Marina, a village in Southern Italy lying over a gypsum diapir, where a hydration process, involving the underlying anhydride, causes a smooth uplift and the formation of scattered sinkholes. More than 20 years of MTI SAR data have been processed, coming from both legacy ERS and ENVISAT missions, and latest-generation RADARSAT-2, COSMO-SkyMed, and Sentinel-1A sensors. Results confirm the presence of a rather steady uplift process, with limited to null variations throughout the whole monitored time-period.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Sensors (Basel) 18 (2018): 1–16. doi:10.3390/s18051359, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Fabio Bovenga 1, Antonella Belmonte 1, Alberto Refice 1, Guido Pasquariello 1, Raffaele Nutricato 2, Davide O. Nitti 2,Maria T. Chiaradia 3/titolo:Performance Analysis of Satellite Missions for Multi-temporal SAR Interferometry/doi:10.3390%2Fs18051359/rivista:Sensors (Basel)/anno:2018/pagina_da:1/pagina_a:16/intervallo_pagine:1–16/volume:18, Sensors (Basel, Switzerland), Sensors, Vol 18, Iss 5, p 1359 (2018), Sensors; Volume 18; Issue 5; Pages: 1359
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e41cc3a7182680d657d9aa83ab3ead74