Abstract

Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is one of the most important techniques for ocean monitoring. Azimuth ambiguities are a real problem in SAR images today, which can cause performance degradation in SAR ocean applications. In particular, littoral zones can be strongly affected by land-based sources, whereas they are usually regions of interest (ROI). Given the presence of complexity and diversity in littoral zones, azimuth ambiguities removal is a tough problem. As SAR sensors can have a repeat cycle, multi-temporal SAR images provide new insight into this problem. A method for azimuth ambiguities removal in littoral zones based on multi-temporal SAR images is proposed in this paper. The proposed processing chain includes co-registration, local correlation, binarization, masking, and restoration steps. It is designed to remove azimuth ambiguities caused by fixed land-based sources. The idea underlying the proposed method is that sea surface is dynamic, whereas azimuth ambiguities caused by land-based sources are constant. Thus, the temporal consistence of azimuth ambiguities is higher than sea clutter. It opens up the possibilities to use multi-temporal SAR data to remove azimuth ambiguities. The design of the method and the experimental procedure are based on images from the Sentinel data hub of Europe Space Agency (ESA). Both Interferometric Wide Swath (IW) and Stripmap (SM) mode images are taken into account to validate the proposed method. This paper also presents two RGB composition methods for better azimuth ambiguities visualization. Experimental results show that the proposed method can remove azimuth ambiguities in littoral zones effectively.

Highlights

  • Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) is a microwave remote sensing technology providing 2D images with 24-h all-weather sensing capability [1]

  • A method for azimuth ambiguities removal in littoral zones based on multi-temporal SAR images is proposed in this paper

  • 6 concludes this paper. in littoral zones based on multi-temporal SAR images

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Summary

Introduction

Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) is a microwave remote sensing technology providing 2D images with 24-h all-weather sensing capability [1]. Since the launch of the Seasat in 1978, the number of spaceborne SAR sensors has drastically increased [2,3]. It is a mature and successful discipline for global ocean monitoring [3,4,5,6]. Advanced spaceborne SAR sensors today provide fine resolutions, such as TerraSAR-X, COSMOS-SkyMed, RADARSAT-2, GF-3, and Sentinel-1 [4,5,6,7,8,9]. Azimuth ambiguities are inherent artifacts in current SAR systems. They are visible in most spaceborne SAR images. If azimuth ambiguities are unrecognized, they can give rise to false alarms and errors in SAR image interpretation

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