4.7 Article

A New Method for Cross-Normalization and Multitemporal Visualization of SAR Images for the Detection of Flooded Areas

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING
Volume 50, Issue 7, Pages 2765-2779

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TGRS.2011.2174999

Keywords

Data fusion; flood detection; image enhancement; multitemporal synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery; RGB composition

Funding

  1. Italian Space Agency (ASI)

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Whenever multitemporal synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images are available, precise calibration and perfect spatial registration are required to obtain a useful image for displaying changes that have occurred. SAR calibration is a very complex and sensitive problem; some errors may persist after calibration that interfere with subsequent steps in the data fusion and visualization process. Because of the strong histogram asymmetry of SAR images, due to the well-known non-Gaussian model of radar backscattering, traditional image preprocessing procedures cannot be used here. A novel specific preprocessing phase, the so-called cross-calibration/normalization, is proposed to solve this problem. This, in turn, facilitates image enhancement and the numerical comparison of different image takes together with data fusion and visualization processes. The proposed processing chain includes filtering, histogram truncation, and equalization steps applied in an adaptive way to the images in question. The design of the method and the experimental procedure is based on images from the Italian Cosmo/Skymed mission. Both Stripmap and Spotlight images are taken into account to test the algorithms at different spatial resolutions. This paper also presents an example application: the generation of a single flood picture, the so-called fast-ready flood map, from multitemporal SAR images. The maps are very quickly and automatically generated without user interaction to support the authorities in providing first aid to a population. Toward this end, RGB composition is used: pre-flood and post-flood images are combined into a color image to better identify the flooded areas in comparison with permanent water and other classes.

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