This letter focuses on the thermal expansion component of persistent scatterer (PS) interferometry (PSI), which is a result of temperature differences in the imaged area between synthetic aperture radar (SAR) acquisitions. This letter is based on very high resolution X-band StripMap SAR data captured by the TerraSAR-X spaceborne sensor. The X-band SAR interferometric phases are highly influenced by the thermal dilation of the imaged objects. This phenomenon can have a strong impact on the PSI products, particularly on the deformation velocity maps, if not properly handled during the PSI analysis. In this letter, we propose a strategy to deal with the thermal dilation phase component, which involves further developing the standard two-parameter PSI model (deformation velocity and residual topographic error) with a third unknown parameter called the thermal dilation parameter, which is estimated for each PS. The map obtained from plotting this parameter for all PSs of a given area is hereafter called thermal map. This letter describes the proposed model and outlines the issue of parameter estimability. In addition, the potential of exploiting the thermal maps is analyzed by illustrating two examples of the Barcelona (Spain) metropolitan area. Thermal maps provide two types of information: The first one is the coefficient of thermal expansion of the observed objects, while the second one, which is related to the pattern of the thermal dilation parameter, gives information about the static structure of these objects. Two important aspects that influence the exploitation of thermal maps are discussed in the last section of this letter: the line-of-sight nature of the derived estimates and the achievable precision in the estimation of the coefficient of thermal expansion.

The Thermal Expansion Component of Persistent Scatterer Interferometry Observations / O. Monserrat, M. Crosetto, M. Cuevas, B. Crippa. - In: IEEE GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING LETTERS. - ISSN 1545-598X. - 8:5(2011), pp. 5763755.864-5763755.868. [10.1109/LGRS.2011.2119463]

The Thermal Expansion Component of Persistent Scatterer Interferometry Observations

B. Crippa
Ultimo
2011

Abstract

This letter focuses on the thermal expansion component of persistent scatterer (PS) interferometry (PSI), which is a result of temperature differences in the imaged area between synthetic aperture radar (SAR) acquisitions. This letter is based on very high resolution X-band StripMap SAR data captured by the TerraSAR-X spaceborne sensor. The X-band SAR interferometric phases are highly influenced by the thermal dilation of the imaged objects. This phenomenon can have a strong impact on the PSI products, particularly on the deformation velocity maps, if not properly handled during the PSI analysis. In this letter, we propose a strategy to deal with the thermal dilation phase component, which involves further developing the standard two-parameter PSI model (deformation velocity and residual topographic error) with a third unknown parameter called the thermal dilation parameter, which is estimated for each PS. The map obtained from plotting this parameter for all PSs of a given area is hereafter called thermal map. This letter describes the proposed model and outlines the issue of parameter estimability. In addition, the potential of exploiting the thermal maps is analyzed by illustrating two examples of the Barcelona (Spain) metropolitan area. Thermal maps provide two types of information: The first one is the coefficient of thermal expansion of the observed objects, while the second one, which is related to the pattern of the thermal dilation parameter, gives information about the static structure of these objects. Two important aspects that influence the exploitation of thermal maps are discussed in the last section of this letter: the line-of-sight nature of the derived estimates and the achievable precision in the estimation of the coefficient of thermal expansion.
Settore ICAR/06 - Topografia e Cartografia
Settore GEO/10 - Geofisica della Terra Solida
2011
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/223016
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