Abstract

Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagers are active microwave sensors that could overcome many challenges of passive optical bathymetry inversion, yet their capacity to yield accurate high-resolution bathymetric mapping is not studied sufficiently. In this study, we evaluate the feasibility of applying fast Fourier transform (FFT) to SAR data in coastal nearshore bathymetry derivation in Florida’s coastal waters. The study aims to develop a robust SAR bathymetry inversion framework across extensive spatial scales to address the dearth of bathymetric data in deeper nearshore coastal regions. By leveraging the Sentinel-1 datasets as a rich source of training data, our method yields high-resolution and accurate depth extraction up to 80 m. A comprehensive workflow to determine both the wavelength and peak wave period is associated with the proposed automated model compilation. A novel contour geometry-based spectral analysis technique for wavelength retrieval is presented that enables an efficient and scalable SAR bathymetry model. Multi-date SAR images were used to assess the robustness of the proposed depth-retrieval model. An accuracy assessment against the GMRT data demonstrated the high efficacy of the proposed approach, achieving a coefficient of determination (R2) above 0.95, a root-mean-square error (RMSE) of 1.56–10.20 m, and relative errors of 3.56–11.08% in automatically extracting the underwater terrain at every 50 m interval. A sensitivity analysis was conducted to estimate the uncertainty associated with our method. Overall, this study highlights the potential of SAR technology to produce updated, cost-effective, and accurate bathymetry maps of high resolution and to fill bathymetric data gaps worldwide. The code and datasets are made publicly available.

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