Title :
Tomographic SAR data analysis based on three-dimensional Monte Carlo simulations of Maxwell´s equations
Author :
Bellez, Sami ; Ferro-Famil, L.
Author_Institution :
SAPHIR team, Univ. of Rennes 1, Rennes, France
Abstract :
In this paper, a coherent scattering model for natural media based on a Monte Carlo simulation of scattering from randomly distributed discrete spheroids is developed. The electromagnetic scattering problem is formulated with the electric field volume integral equation and solved by means of the method of moments with electrostatic basis functions. The model simulates the fields scattered by the medium for each of the realization of spheroid configurations generated using Metropolis shuffling method. The scattering model is then deployed to simulate polarimetric multi-baseline synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data. These data are afterwards processed to reconstruct the vertical profile of the polarimetric reflectivity density. The reflectivity density statistics are acquired via a Monte Carlo simulation over a large number of realizations. Using a P-band tomographic radar configuration, we first analyze the vertical profile of the polarimetric reflectivity density. Then we investigate the influence of spheroid concentration as well as the impact of electromagnetic coupling between scatterers on the reflectivity density.
Keywords :
Maxwell equations; Monte Carlo methods; data analysis; electric field integral equations; electromagnetic wave scattering; method of moments; radar polarimetry; reflectivity; synthetic aperture radar; Maxwell equations; Metropolis shuffling method; P-band tomographic radar configuration; coherent scattering model; electric field volume integral equation; electromagnetic coupling; electromagnetic scattering problem; electrostatic basis functions; method of moments; natural media; polarimetric multibaseline synthetic aperture radar data simulation; polarimetric reflectivity density; randomly distributed discrete spheroids; reflectivity density statistics; three-dimensional Monte Carlo simulations; tomographic SAR data analysis; vertical profile reconstruction; Electromagnetic scattering; Mathematical model; Monte Carlo methods; Synthetic aperture radar; Tomography; Method of Moments; Natural media; SAR; SAR tomography; Scattering model;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS), 2013 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Melbourne, VIC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-1114-1
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2013.6723725