Abstract

AbstractOver the past 20years, repeat‐pass spaceborne interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) has been widely used as a geodetic technique to generate maps of the Earth's topography and to measure the Earth's surface deformation. In this paper, we present a new approach to exploit microwave data from InSAR, particularly Persistent Scatterer InSAR (PSI), and Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) to derive maps of the absolute water vapor content in the Earth's atmosphere. Atmospheric water vapor results in a phase shift in the InSAR interferogram, which if successfully separated from other phase components provides valuable information about its distribution. PSI produces precipitable water vapor (PWV) difference maps of a high spatial density, which can be inverted using the least squares method to retrieve PWV maps at each SAR acquisition time. These maps do not contain the absolute (total) PWV along the signal path but only a part of it. The components eliminated by forming interferograms or phase filtering during PSI data processing are reconstructed using GNSS phase observations. The approach is applied to build maps of absolute PWV by combining data from InSAR and GNSS over the region of Upper Rhine Graben in Germany and France. For validation, we compared the derived PWV maps with PWV maps measured by the optical sensor MEdium‐Resolution Imaging Spectrometer. The results show strong spatial correlation with values of uncertainty of less than 1.5mm. Continuous grids of PWV are then produced by applying the kriging geostatistical interpolation technique that exploits the spatial correlations between the PWV observations.

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