Title :
SAR monitoring of progressive and seasonal ground deformation using the permanent scatterers technique
Author :
Colesanti, Carlo ; Ferretti, Alessandro ; Novali, Fabrizio ; Prati, Claudio ; Rocca, Fabio
Author_Institution :
Dipt. di Elettronica e Inf., Politecnico di Milano, Italy
fDate :
7/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Spaceborne differential radar interferometry has proven a remarkable potential for mapping ground deformation phenomena (e.g., urban subsidence, volcano dynamics, coseismic and postseismic displacements along faults, as well as slope instability). However, a full operational capability has not been achieved yet due to atmospheric disturbances and phase decorrelation phenomena. These drawbacks can often be-at least partially-overcome by carrying out measurements on a subset of image pixels corresponding to natural or artificial stable reflectors [permanent scatterers (PS)] and exploiting long temporal series of interferometric data. This approach allows one to push the measurement precision very close to its theoretical limit (in the order of ∼1 mm for C-band European Remote Sensing (ERS)-like sensors). In this paper, the detection of both time-uniform and seasonal deformation phenomena is addressed, and a first assessment of the precision achievable by means of the PS Technique is discussed. Results highlighting deformation phenomena occurring in two test sites in California are reported (Fremont in the Southern Bay Area and San Jose in the Santa Clara Valley).
Keywords :
geodesy; geophysical techniques; radar theory; remote sensing by radar; spaceborne radar; synthetic aperture radar; terrain mapping; California; Fremont; SAR; San Jose; Santa Clara Valley; Southern Bay Area; USA; United States; coseismic displacement; differential radar interferometry; geodesy; geodetic deformation; geophysical measurement technique; land surface; permanent scatterer; phase decorrelation; postseismic displacement; progressive deformation; radar remote sensing; seasonal ground deformation; spaceborne radar; subsidence; synthetic aperture radar; terrain mapping; Atmospheric measurements; Decorrelation; Monitoring; Pixel; Radar interferometry; Radar scattering; Remote sensing; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Spaceborne radar; Volcanoes;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2003.813278