Title :
Equivalence Analysis of Accuracy of Geolocation Models for Spaceborne InSAR
Author :
Xu, Huaping ; Kang, Changhui
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electron. & Inf. Eng., Beihang Univ., Beijing, China
Abstract :
There are two main geolocation models for spaceborne synthetic aperture radar (SAR) interferometry (InSAR): range Doppler (RD) and direct geocoding (DG) models. The RD model gets the target position by combining and solving the Doppler equation, slant-range equation, and the modified Earth model equation. The DG location model gets the target position through its 3-D coordinates by the Doppler equation and two slant-range equations. Usually, the geolocation accuracy analyses of these two models are discussed separately. It is confused which one is more precise and we should use during InSAR system designing. This paper deduced and compared the geolocation accuracies of these two models in the same frame-matrix. According to the matrix theory, the explicit expressions of the geolocation uncertainty of RD and DG models were deduced through the use of parameters in matrix form. After defining a new slant-range plane coordinate system, the precision of RD geolocation model and that of geocoding location model were compared quantificationally. It was presented that the geolocation uncertainty formulas between RD and DG models were the same. Then, the conclusion that these two models would lead to the same precision in geolocation measurement was obtained. At last, computer simulation results were employed to confirm the mathematical analysis.
Keywords :
Doppler effect; matrix algebra; position measurement; radar interferometry; remote sensing by radar; spaceborne radar; synthetic aperture radar; Doppler equation; direct geocoding model; equivalence analysis; geocoding location model; geolocation model accuracy; geolocation model precision; geolocation model uncertainty; matrix theory; modified Earth model equation; range Doppler model; slant range equation; slant range plane coordinate system; spaceborne InSAR; synthetic aperture radar interferometry; Accuracy; geolocation; interferometry; models; synthetic aperture radar (SAR);
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2009.2027897