Title :
Monitoring of oil palm plantations and growth variations with a dense vegetation model
Author :
Khar-Chun Teng ; Jun-Yi Koay ; Seng-Heng Tey ; Hong-Tat Ewe ; Hean-Teik Chuah
Author_Institution :
Univ. Tunku Abdul Rahman, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Abstract :
The development of microwave remote sensing models for the monitoring of vegetation has received wide attention in recent years. For vegetation in the tropics, it is necessary to consider a dense medium model for the theoretical modelling of the microwave interaction with the vegetation medium. In this paper, a multilayer model based on the radiative transfer theory for a dense vegetation medium is developed where the coherence effects and near field interaction effects of closely spaced leaves and branches are considered by incorporating the Dense Medium Phase and Amplitude Correction Theory (DM-PACT) and Fresnel Phase Corrections. The iterative solutions of the radiative transfer model are computed with input based on ground truth measurements of physical parameters of oil palm plantations in the state of Perak, Malaysia, and compared with the SAR images obtained from RADARSAT2. Preliminary results are analyzed for dominant scattering mechanisms as well as monitoring of growth variation of oil palm trees for further development of operation models for long term monitoring of oil palm plantations.
Keywords :
radiative transfer; remote sensing; synthetic aperture radar; vegetation mapping; DM-PACT; Fresnel phase correction; Malaysia; Perak state; RADARSAT2; SAR image; closely spaced branch near field interaction effect; closely spaced leave near field interaction effect; coherence effect; dense medium model; dense medium phase and amplitude correction theory; dense vegetation medium; dense vegetation model; dominant scattering mechanism; ground truth measurement; iterative solution; long term oil palm plantation monitoring operation model development; microwave interaction theoretical modelling; microwave remote sensing model development; multilayer model; oil palm growth variation monitoring; oil palm plantation monitoring; oil palm plantation physical parameter; oil palm tree growth variation monitoring; radiative transfer model; radiative transfer theory; tropics vegetation; vegetation monitoring; Backscatter; Microwave imaging; Monitoring; Scattering; Synthetic aperture radar; Vegetation; Vegetation mapping; Radar remote sensing; electromagnetic modeling; radar applications; remote monitoring; vegetation;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS), 2014 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Quebec City, QC
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2014.6946416