Abstract

Coastline detection using a Gaussian Mixture Model (GMM) applied to synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery is usually inaccurate due to the inherent noise of SAR data. In addition, the traditional active counter model is sensitive to the initial position of the contour line and requires a large number of iterations to converge to a solution. In this study, we first used the GMM algorithm to segment the SAR images and obtain a coarse land and sea segmentation map. This map is then used as the initial position for a subsequent active contour model. The K distribution was introduced into the local statistical active contour model to better model the SAR image. The Gaussian distribution-based local active contour model and the algorithm detailed in this paper were used to perform coastline extraction experiments on four SAR images. Four GF-3 SAR images with different modes were collected to validate the efficiency of the proposed method. The experimental results show that the coastline extraction methods from SAR images based on the GMM algorithm and the K distribution-based local statistical active contour model (LKDACM) overcame the shortcomings of the traditional active contour model to accurately and quickly detect coastlines, thus enabling the detection of coastline changes.

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