Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper contrasts predicted X-band sea surface backscattering from slick-free and oil-covered sea surfaces with actual measurements acquired by the X-band satellite TerraSAR-X and COSMO-SkyMed Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) missions. Two SAR scenes were acquired with a temporal difference of about 36 minutes, under similar met-ocean conditions, during the North Sea’s Gannet Alpha oil spill accident. The normalized radar cross section of the slick-free sea surface is predicted using the Advanced Integral Equation Model (AIEM) while the backscatter from the oiled sea surface is predicted by the AIEM augmented with the Model of Local Balance (MLB) to include the damping effect of oil slicks. Experimental results show that X-band co-polarized numerical predictions agree reasonably well with both TSX and CSK actual measurements collected over slick-free sea surfaces. When dealing with oil-covered sea surfaces, the predicted backscattering reasonably agrees with TSX measurements, while it overestimates the CSK ones. This is likely due to the different spreading conditions of the oil imaged by the two satellite missions.

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