Abstract

The rationale of combining polarimetric SAR data with multi-temporal InSAR techniques, which is based on polarimetric optimization, is to improve their performance in identifying coherent pixels and increasing the accuracy of deformation monitoring. This paper extended the polarimetric optimization of Persistent Scatterer Interferometry (PSI) and Small Baseline Subset (SBAS) techniques on dual-polarized Sentinel-1 data. For this purpose, 20 dual-polarization (VV/VH) SAR images acquired by the Sentinel-1A sensor were used. The results indicated that by applying polarimetric optimization on dual-polarized data in the SBAS technique, the number of candidate and final coherent pixels increased 2.95 and 1.42 times, respectively. Similarly, the number of candidate and final coherent pixels (CP) increased 3.12 and 1.45 times in the PSI technique, respectively. Also, the effect of the polarimetric optimization on increasing the density of coherent points in different regions was investigated. In this framework, Sentinel-2 time-series images were classified into four classes (bare soil, vegetation, build-up, and others) using Google Earth Engine by applying remote sensing indices. This demonstrated that polarimetric optimization of the SBAS technique was more effective in bare soil and vegetated regions than in urban areas. However, polarimetric optimization of the PSI technique was more successful in non-urban regions than in urban areas. An external comparative analysis was also performed between the deformation results derived by PSI and SBAS techniques and GPS observation. The evaluation demonstrated that polarimetric optimization coupled with multi-temporal InSAR analysis yielded more reliable deformation results than conventional single-polarimetric data.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call