Abstract

Global navigation satellite system (GNSS) reflectometry (GNSS-R) developed into a promising remote sensing technique. However, few previous related studies considered the potential of its polarization. Owing to lack of sufficient in situ measurement data to support comprehensive investigation of GNSS-R polarization, this study used theoretical models and reference to our previous work to explore this topic. The commonly used microwave scattering models are employed to get the bare soil or vegetation scattering properties of GNSS-R configurations, i.e., the random surface scattering model and the first-order radiative transfer equation were improved and then employed to obtain the scattering properties of both bare soil and vegetation. Since the final output of the space-borne GNSS-R missions is a delay Doppler map (DDM), a spaceborne (DDM) simulator, oriented for the Chinese FengYun-3E (FY-3E) GNSS-R payload, was utilized to obtain the final output at different polarizations. Using the developed models (such as the bare soil and vegetation scattering models), corresponding polarization simulations were performed. That is to say, not only the commonly used LR (left hand circular polarizations (LHCP) received and the right hand circular polarizations (RHCP) received) can be presented, but also the scattering properties at RR, VR, and HR (the transmitted signals are RHCP, while the received polarizations are RHCP, vertical (V) and horizontal (H) polarizations, respectively) can be predicted by our developed models. Results reveal obvious polarization differences for the bistatic scattering and DDM. Therefore, the use of GNSS-R polarization information has potential to provide competitive and fruitful results in the future detection of land surface geophysical parameters.

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