Abstract

Low-frequency synthetic aperture radar (SAR) sensors are prone to ionospheric irregularity structures that affect the amplitude and/or phase of the radar signal. Azimuthal striping caused by amplitude scintillation in SAR data is an initial observation of such effects. In the absence of any physical model and/or technique to mitigate scintillation stripes, we have applied a 2-D fast Fourier transform (FFT) approach for improved interpretation and target identification in fully polarimetric SAR (POLSAR) model-based decomposition scattering powers. Few scenes of fully polarimetric Advanced Land Observation Satellite-Phased Array type L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (ALOS/PALSAR) and ALOS-2/PALSAR-2 under different ionospheric conditions are acquired and used in this study. As a reference, data sets over the same areas are also acquired on different dates with negligible ionospheric activity (ionospheric quiet day). All the data sets are corrected for the Faraday rotation angle ( $\Omega$ ), which is estimated using the Bickel–Bates approach. Three correction strategies of scintillation-affected model-based scattering power decomposition images are presented. The strategies (zero masking, thresholding, and averaging-post-thresholding) are implemented on 2-D FFT of scattering power images. An intercomparison of corrected decomposition results from the correction strategies demonstrates the capability of 2-D-FFT-based correction strategies to improve the dominant scattering component by 3%–5% for homogeneous terrains. The correction method based on averaging-post-thresholding gives the best results that are further tested by performing a supervised classification. The overall accuracy and kappa coefficient ( ${OA}, \hat {k}$ ) of the averaging-post-thresholding technique (72.87%, 0.59) is comparable to those of the reference data (78.74%, 0.69).

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