Abstract

Synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR) measures the projection of three-dimensional (3D) ground displacement in the range direction and in the azimuth direction through image processing. The incapability of InSAR in measuring the 3D displacements restricts its capability for assessing real Earth surface deformation. The near-polar orbiting characteristics of InSAR missions reduce the sensitivity of line-of-sight (LOS) displacements significantly to the north-south components of the real 3D displacement fields and weaken the geometric strength of a given configuration. Applying range measurements from various missions to address 3D displacement leads to an ill-posed inverse problem that needs to be regularized. Moreover, it needs appropriate weighting of the observations to give proper estimates of the parameters. In this study, we propose Tikhonov regularization (TR) and least-squares variance component estimation (LS-VCE) methods for retrieving 3D displacement vectors from range and azimuth displacements. Depending on the functional degree of freedom (DoF) of the inverse problem, the TR and LS-VCE methods are applied in determined and overdetermined equation systems, respectively, to stabilize the ill-conditioned models and estimate the variance components of observations. These methods were evaluated by two synthetic data sets and a real data set from the Sentinel-1 terrain observation by progressive scan (TOPS) and ALOS-2 phased array type L-band synthetic aperture radar (PALSAR-2) missions in 2015 of the MW = 8.3 Illapel earthquake in Chile. Results indicate more than 40% improvement in both the precision and accuracy of retrieving 3D deformation fields when the regularized LS-VCE (RLS-VCE) is adopted instead of the conventional method (CM) that considers primary weighting for observations. Applying the range and azimuth InSAR displacements together with adopting the LS-VCE method reveal a north-south convergent borderline near 31.2° S in the 2015 Illapel earthquake.

Highlights

  • Synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR) has become a widely applied technique for precise and detailed mapping of the Earth’s surface deformation

  • The results indicate that the RLSVCE method retrieves the eastern, northern, and vertical components better than conventional method (CM)

  • After estimating the proper weights of measurements through the LS-variance component estimations (VCEs) method and applying the Tikhonov regularization (TR) method, the root-mean-square errors (RMSEs) decreased to 4.92 and 4.54 cm for biased and unbiased states, respectively, equivalent to 39% and 44% improvement in retrieving the 3D displacement vector (Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR) has become a widely applied technique for precise and detailed mapping of the Earth’s surface deformation. The range displacement is derived from conventional interferometry, while azimuth displacement can be retrieved from multiaperture interferometry (MAI) or offset tracking. Providing the range and azimuth displacements instead of threedimensional (3D) measurements is one of the main shortcomings of InSAR. Retrieving 3D surface displacement maps from InSAR is important for constraining sources of deformation in geophysical. This manuscript was submitted on June 17, 2018; approved on March 5, 2019; published online on August 12, 2019. Discussion period open until January 12, 2020; separate discussions must be submitted for individual papers. This paper is part of the Journal of Surveying Engineering, Ó ASCE, ISSN 0733-9453

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