Abstract

A microwave polarimetric scattering model for a forest canopy is developed based on the iterative solution of the vector radiative transfer equations up to the second order. The forest canopy constituents (branches, leaves, stems, and trunks) are embedded in a multi-layered medium over a rough interface. The branches, stems, and trunks are modeled as finite randomly oriented cylinders. Deciduous leaves are modeled as randomly oriented discs and coniferous leaves are modeled as randomly oriented needles. The vector radiative transfer equations contain non-diagonal extinction matrices that account for the difference in propagation constants and the attenuation rates between the vertical and horizontal polarizations. For a plane wave exciting the canopy, the average Mueller matrix is formulated, and then used to determine the linearly polarized backscattering coefficients including both the copolarized and cross-polarized power returns. Comparisons of the model with measurements from Les Landes Forest of France showed good agreements over a wide frequency band and gave a quantitative understanding of the relation between the backscattering coefficients and the age of the trees in the forest and forest biomass.

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