DocumentCode
1301101
Title
Signatures of ALOS PALSAR L-Band Backscatter in Swedish Forest
Author
Santoro, Maurizio ; Fransson, Johan E S ; Eriksson, Leif E B ; Magnusson, Mattias ; Ulander, Lars M H ; Olsson, Håkan
Author_Institution
Gamma Remote Sensing AG, Gumligen, Switzerland
Volume
47
Issue
12
fYear
2009
Firstpage
4001
Lastpage
4019
Abstract
The Phased Array type L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar onboard the Advanced Land Observing Satellite has, since its launch, been acquiring an extensive data set of images over two forest test sites in Sweden. The sites of Remningstorp (Lat. 58deg30´ N, Long. 13deg40´ E) in the south and Krycklan (Lat. 64deg14´ N, Long. 19deg50´ E) in the north of Sweden are characterized by hemiboreal and boreal forests, respectively. In this paper, we have investigated the signatures of standwise backscatter measurements from forests with different growth stages in relation to polarization, environmental conditions, image viewing geometry, and spatial resolution. The HV backscatter presented stronger sensitivity to the forest growth stage than the HH and VV backscatter. Under unfrozen conditions, the dynamic range of fine-beam data acquired at 34.3deg was 8-9 dB for the HV polarization and 6-7 dB for the HH polarization. At 21.5deg, in the polarimetric mode, the dynamic range was 6, 7, and 9 dB at VV, HH, and HV polarizations, respectively. Regardless of the specific polarization, the backscatter was temporally consistent under unfrozen conditions, with a small increase of backscatter in regrowing young forest for wet conditions. Under thawing and frozen conditions, repeated measurements were available only for the HH backscatter at 34.3deg. For thawing conditions, the backscatter level was similar to the unfrozen conditions even though the signatures differed depending on temperature dynamics, snow-cover properties, and precipitation. Under frozen conditions, the signatures varied depending on temperature. For images acquired when the temperature was well below the freezing point, the backscatter was low, and the dynamic range was small (2-4 dB); nonetheless, the measurements were consistent. Images acquired when temperature was close to the freezing point presented a behavior similar to unfrozen conditions. The sensitivity of the backscatter to the image viewing geometry for d- - ifferent growth stages was studied for data acquired under dry unfrozen conditions. The backscatter difference increased for increasing look angle because of the increase in volume scattering and the decrease of ground-surface backscatter. The largest difference was observed at 41.5deg with 2.5-4-dB difference for the HH and 4-5-dB difference for the HV case. Loss of spatial resolution (20-50 m) did not have any effect on the backscatter signatures in Krycklan, whereas in Remningstorp, the smallest stands were affected.
Keywords
geophysical signal processing; geophysics computing; image processing; phased array radar; radar cross-sections; synthetic aperture radar; vegetation; ALOS PALSAR L-band backscatter signatures; Advanced Land Observing Satellite; HH polarization; HV polarization; Krycklan; Phased Array type L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar; Remningstorp; Sweden; VV polarization; atmospheric precipitation; boreal forests; environmental conditions; forest growth stage; frozen conditions; ground-surface backscatter; hemiboreal forests; image viewing geometry; snow-cover properties; spatial resolution; temperature dynamics; thawing conditions; unfrozen conditions; volume scattering; Advanced Land Observing Satellite (ALOS) Phased Array type L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (PALSAR); SAR backscatter; Sweden; boreal forest; environmental conditions; image viewing geometry; polarization;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0196-2892
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TGRS.2009.2023906
Filename
5208228
Link To Document