Variations in the tropospheric phase delay pose a primary challenge to achieving precise displacement measurements in Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) analysis. This study presents a cluster-based empirical tropospheric phase correction approach to analyze land subsidence rates from large-scale Sentinel‑1 data stacks. Our method identifies the optimum number of clusters in individual interferograms for K‑means clustering, and segments extensive interferograms into areas with consistent tropospheric phase delay behaviors. It then performs tropospheric phase correction based on empirical topography-phase correlation, addressing stratified and broad-scale tropospheric phase delays. Applied to a six-year data stack along a 1000-km track in Iran, we demonstrate that this approach enhances interferogram quality by reducing the standard deviation by 50% and lowering the semivariance of the interferograms to 20 cm2 at distances up to 800 km in 97% of the interferograms. Additionally, the corrected time series of deformation shows a 40% reduction in the root mean square of residuals at the most severely deformed points. By analyzing the corrected interferograms, we show that our method improves the efficiency of country-scale InSAR surveys to detect and quantify present-day land subsidence in Iran, which is essential for groundwater management and sustainable water resource planning.
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