Title :
Retrieval of vegetation parameters with SAR interferometry
Author :
Wegmüller, Urs ; Werner, Charles
Author_Institution :
GAMMA Remote Sensing AG, Muri, Switzerland
fDate :
1/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The potential of SAR interferometric techniques for the retrieval of vegetation parameters was investigated using ERS-1 data over agricultural and forested test sites. In a first experiment an interferometrically derived forest map was generated. The classification was based on the interferometric correlation and the backscatter intensities. The result was geocoded, using the interferometrically derived height map generated from the same ERS SAR data pair, and validated with a conventional digital forest map. Forest mapping accuracies of around 90% and better were achieved. In a second experiment, multitemporal data over an agricultural site were used to investigate the potential of repeat-pass interferometry to monitor farming activity, crop development, and soil moisture variations. The interferometric correlation was used as an indicator of dense vegetation and geometric change. It was possible, for example, to identify harvesting by the high correlation of the post-harvest bare or stubble field. Decreasing interferometric correlation was observed as a consequence of crop growth
Keywords :
agriculture; farming; forestry; geophysical techniques; image classification; image coding; radar imaging; remote sensing by radar; spaceborne radar; synthetic aperture radar; ERS-1; SAR interferometry; agriculture; backscatter intensities; bare field; crop development; crops; farming; forest; forestry; geocoding; geophysical measurement technique; harvesting; image classification; image coding; radar remote sensing; repeat-pass interferometry; soil moisture; spaceborne radar; stubble field; vegetation mapping; vegetation parameters; Backscatter; Crops; Electromagnetic scattering; Information retrieval; Interferometry; Monitoring; Radar scattering; Space technology; Testing; Vegetation mapping;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on