Abstract

ABSTRACT Owing to continuous global warming, frozen soil degradation has become a universal phenomenon, leading to large-scale ground deformation that affects engineering construction and the fragile ecological balance. Geodetic observations, especially temporal InSAR, can quantify ground deformation. However, the accuracy of InSAR modelling in capturing the spatial–temporal variability of the freeze–thaw process depends on the spatial resolution of temperature measurements. This paper proposes a freeze–thaw amplitude model incorporating MODIS LST based on a single-master InSAR time-series deformation to calculate frozen soil deformation. We applied this model to the Qumalai-Zhiduo area of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and compared its results with those of the model using weather station temperature in terms of frozen soil deformation parameters, RSME, and characteristic targets. Our study found that the model incorporating MODIS LST performed better in areas far from weather stations, while both models produced similar results in areas of close proximity. Finally, we evaluated another commonly used method for calculating frozen soil deformation parameters and found that the method incorporating MODIS LST based on a single-master time-series deformation is more accurate and precise than the method based on a multi-master SBAS network.

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