Abstract

Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data can provide complementary information to improve the mapping of urban impervious surfaces. However, most studies have focused on using only single polarization SAR data. This paper presents a comparative study on the combined use of multispectral optical data and dual polarization SAR data to identify urban impervious surfaces. The experimental results using SPOT-5, TerraSAR-X and ALOS PALSAR data were consistent compared with our previous results using single polarization SAR data. The two-fold result showed that polarimetric SAR images were generally superior to single polarization SAR data for extracting impervious surface areas, although not every individual polarimetric feature could provide a positive result for impervious surfaces mapping. Compared with using only optical and SAR data, the separate HH and HV polarization data improved the accuracy of the results. The incorporation of both Entropy and Alpha features also improved the accuracy. However, the HH/HV ratio and the separate use of coherence did not provide positive results. Noticeably, a combination of all of the dual-polarimetric SAR features was capable of obtaining the best accuracy, with an improvement of approximately 3.5% compared with that of only using SPOT-5 images. This result indicates the superiority of dual-polarimetric SAR data over single polarimetric SAR data for the mapping of urban impervious surfaces.

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