4.7 Article

Seasonality in the Angular Dependence of ASAR Wide Swath Backscatter

Journal

IEEE GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING LETTERS
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages 1423-1427

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/LGRS.2013.2294725

Keywords

C-band; incidence angle; synthetic aperture radar (SAR); time series; vegetation

Funding

  1. Ghent University
  2. Belgian Federal Science Policy through the Research Programme for Earth Observation Stereo II as part of the Flood Mapping and Soil Moisture Retrieval for Improved Water Management (FLOODMOIST) Project [SR/00/152]

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The analysis of multitemporal synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images requires normalization to a common incidence angle when the images are acquired in varying view geometry. The dependence of radar backscatter on the incidence angle is known to vary with vegetation cover and will therefore change throughout the year. This letter tries to quantify the effect of neglecting this seasonal variability in an empirical incidence angle normalization for a region under Mediterranean climatic conditions. A methodology is presented to assess, at monthly intervals, the seasonal variability of the angular dependence of ASAR Wide Swath (WS) backscatter over Calabria, Italy. It is observed that the angular dependence of backscatter strongly fluctuates temporally, depending on the land cover. The angular dependence of ASAR WS backscatter has a similar seasonal behavior as that of the Advanced Scatterometer for large parts of the study site when both are resampled to a common spatial and temporal resolution. It is found that errors that are larger than the radiometric accuracy of the sensor may be introduced when this temporal variability is ignored in an angular normalization.

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