Abstract

The geolocation accuracy of Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images is crucial for their application in various industries. Five high-resolution SAR satellites, namely ALOS, TerraSAR-X, Cosmo-SkyMed, RadarSat-2, and Chinese YG-3, provide a vast amount of image data for research purposes, although their geometric accuracies differ despite similar resolutions. To evaluate and compare the geometric accuracy of these satellites under the same ground control reference, a validation field was established in Xianning, China. The rational function model (RFM) was used to analyze the geometric performance of the five satellites based on the Xianning validation field. The study showed that each image could achieve sub-pixel positioning accuracy in range and azimuth direction when four ground control points (GCPs) were placed in the corners, resulting in a root mean square error (RMSE) of 1.5 pixels. The study also highlighted the effectiveness of an automated GCP-matching approach to mitigate manual identification of points in SAR images, and results demonstrate that the five SAR satellite images can all achieve sub-pixel positioning accuracy in range and azimuth direction when four GCPs are used. Overall, the verification results provide a reference for SAR satellite systems’ designs, calibrations, and various remote sensing activities.

Full Text
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