DocumentCode
575962
Title
Comparison of stereo-optical and dual-band InSAR DEMs in Papua New Guinea
Author
Tadono, Takeo ; Williams, Mark L. ; Hensley, Scott
Author_Institution
Japan Aerosp. Exploration Agency, Tsukuba, Japan
fYear
2012
fDate
22-27 July 2012
Firstpage
3158
Lastpage
3161
Abstract
This paper describes comparison of digital elevation data derived from synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and stereo optical imagery used to understand temporal changes of tropical forest and to estimate tree height in tropical regions. Tree height information is important for forest management and global carbon cycle studies. An intereferometric SAR (InSAR) potentially unhampered by tropical cloud cover. InSAR heights depend on the microwave frequency: low frequency P-band penetrates to the forest floor and ground-volume scattering yields a height close to terrain height, high frequency X-band displays only shallow canopy penetration, and may yield heights several metres below the canopy surface. The exact behaviours depend on the nature of both terrain and forest. A stereo-optical sensor may be used to derive digital elevation data using photogrammetry. Several recent satellite-based stereo-optical instruments operate with fine spatial resolution however optical imagery is affected by clouds. The forest height derived from optical images is essentially the top of the canopy. This research investigates whether it is possible to understand forest changes in tropical regions by comparing digital elevations from dual-frequency, single-pass airborne InSAR with satellite-based stereo-optical data in Papua New Guinea. The results indicate the possibility of forest change and tree height estimation using this combination of data.
Keywords
airborne radar; clouds; digital elevation models; geophysical image processing; photogrammetry; radar interferometry; synthetic aperture radar; vegetation; vegetation mapping; InSAR heights; Papua New Guinea; canopy surface; digital elevation data; dual-band InSAR DEM; dual-frequency single-pass airborne InSAR; forest changes; forest floor; forest management; global carbon cycle; ground-volume scattering; height information; high frequency X-band; intereferometric SAR; low frequency P-band penetrates; microwave frequency; photogrammetry; satellite-based stereooptical data; satellite-based stereooptical instruments; shallow canopy penetration; spatial resolution; stereo optical imagery; stereooptical DEM; stereooptical sensor; synthetic aperture radar; temporal changes; terrain height; tree height estimation; tropical cloud cover; tropical forest; tropical regions; Adaptive optics; Laser radar; Optical imaging; Optical interferometry; Optical sensors; Synthetic aperture radar; Vegetation; ALOS; GeoSAR; PRISM; Tree height;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS), 2012 IEEE International
Conference_Location
Munich
ISSN
2153-6996
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-1160-1
Electronic_ISBN
2153-6996
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IGARSS.2012.6350755
Filename
6350755
Link To Document