4.7 Article

Identifying Potential Landslides by Stacking-InSAR in Southwestern China and Its Performance Comparison with SBAS-InSAR

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 13, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs13183662

Keywords

Stacking-InSAR; potential landslides; Sentinel-1; southwestern China

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China Major Program [41941019]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41801391]
  3. State Key Laboratory of Geohazard Prevention and Geoenvironment Protection Independent Research Project [SKLGP2020Z012]
  4. project on identification and monitoring of potential geological hazards with remote sensing in Sichuan Province [510201202076888]
  5. Everest Scientific Project at Chengdu University of Technology [2020ZF114103]

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The use of Stacking-InSAR method near Wenchuan County in Southwest China, based on a large number of SAR data, successfully and efficiently identified potential landslides, showing high consistency with traditional SBAS-InSAR method.
Landslide disasters occur frequently in the mountainous areas in southwest China, which pose serious threats to the local residents. Interferometry Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) provides us the ability to identify active slopes as potential landslides in vast mountainous areas, to help prevent and mitigate the disasters. Quickly and accurately identifying potential landslides based on massive SAR data is of great significance. Taking the national highway near Wenchuan County, China, as study area, this paper used a Stacking-InSAR method to quickly and qualitatively identify potential landslides based on a total of 40 Sentinel SAR images acquired from November 2017 to March 2019. As a result, 72 active slopes were successfully detected as potential landslides. By comparing the results from Stacking-InSAR with the results from the traditional SBAS-InSAR (Small Baselines Subset) time series method, it was found that the two methods had a high consistency, with 81.7% potential landslides identified by both of the two methods. A detailed comparison on the detection differences was performed, revealing that Stacking-InSAR, compared to SBAS-InSAR may miss a few active slopes with small spatial scales, small displacement levels and the ones affected by the atmosphere, while it has good performance on poor-coherence regions, with the advantages of low technical requirements and low computation labor. The Stacking-InSAR method would be a fast and powerful method to qualitatively and effectively identify potential landslides in vast mountainous areas, with a comprehensive understanding of its specialty and limitations.

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