Title :
Monitoring biomass using polarimetric multi-frequency SAR
Author :
Milne, A.K. ; Lucas, R.M. ; Cronin, N. ; Dong, Y. ; Witte, C.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Geomatics Eng., New South Wales Univ., Kensington, NSW, Australia
Abstract :
Classification of radar images remains a challenge due largely to the effects of speckle. In this paper the classification of radar images is accomplished in two steps. First, an image is partioned into uniform areas or segments and second, these segments are then classified into information classes. Both segmentation and classification are achieved by using the Gaussian Markov random field model. The results of segmentation and classification routines applied to the woodland areas in Queensland using both spaceborne and airborne SAR image data are presented. In terms of segmentation, regions whose mean differences are as small as 0.5dB and with ratios of the standard deviation to the mean as high as 0.35 are separated with accuracies approaching 90%. In terms of classification, there are more ambiguities in single-band data. Multi-band polarised data on the other hand provided better results. Relationships established between component biomass and the backscatter coefficient at all wavelengths and polarisations indicated a strong correspondence (r2>0.80) between AIRSAR L- and P-band backscatter and above ground, branch and trunk biomass. The highest correlation between component biomass and backscatter using JERS1 related to the estimation of stem biomass leading to the conclusion that more reliable estimates of total and component biomass will require multiband-multipolarimetric data
Keywords :
backscatter; image classification; image segmentation; remote sensing by radar; synthetic aperture radar; vegetation mapping; AIRSAR L- and P-band backscatter; Gaussian Markov random field model; JERS1; P-band backscatter; Queensland; airborne SAR image data; backscatter coefficient; biomass; component biomass; effects of speckle; image classification; image segmentation; multiband multipolarimetric data; polarimetric multi-frequency SAR; spaceborne SAR image data; standard deviation; woodland areas; Backscatter; Biomass; Image segmentation; Markov random fields; Monitoring; Polarization; Radar imaging; Radar polarimetry; Spaceborne radar; Speckle;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference Proceedings, 2000 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5846-5
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2000.879852