4.7 Article

Application of the Trace Coherence to HH-VV PolInSAR TanDEM-X Data for Vegetation Height Estimation

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TGRS.2021.3101016

Keywords

Coherence; Covariance matrices; Synthetic aperture radar; Scattering; Estimation; Decorrelation; Vegetation mapping; Agriculture; height; inversion; polarimetric and interferometric synthetic aperture radar (SAR); trace coherence (TrCoh)

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation
  2. State Agency of Research (AEI)
  3. European Funds for Regional Development (EFRD) [TEC2017-85244-C2-1-P]
  4. Generalitat Valenciana
  5. European Social Fund (ESF) [ACIF/2018/204]

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This study investigates the incorporation of the operator Trace Coherence (TrCoh) in polarimetric and interferometric SAR methodologies for estimating vegetation biophysical parameters. A modified inversion algorithm based on the RVoG model, employing TrCoh, demonstrates improved computational efficiency and accuracy compared to conventional methods. Validation using TanDEM-X data and reference data in a paddy rice area shows the proposed approach provides higher accuracy in vegetation height estimation.
This article investigates, for the first time, the inclusion of the operator Trace Coherence (TrCoh) in polarimetric and interferometric synthetic aperture radar (SAR) methodologies for the estimation of biophysical parameters of vegetation. A modified inversion algorithm based on the well-known Random Volume over Ground (RVoG) model, which employs the TrCoh, is described and evaluated. In this regard, a different set of coherence extrema is used as input for the retrieval stage. In addition, the proposed methodology improves the inversion algorithm by employing analytical solutions rather than approximations. Validation is carried out exploiting single-pass HH-VV bistatic TanDEM-X data, together with reference data acquired over a paddy rice area in Spain. The added value of the TrCoh and the convenience of the use of analytical solutions are assessed by comparing with the conventional polarimetric SAR interferometry (PolInSAR) algorithm. Results demonstrate that the modified proposed methodology is computationally more effective than current methods on this dataset. For the same scene, the steps required for inversion are computed in 6 min with the conventional method, while it only takes 6 s with the proposed approach. Moreover, vegetation height estimates exhibit a higher accuracy with the proposed method in all fields under evaluation. The root-mean-squared error reached with the modified method improves by 7 cm with respect to the conventional algorithm.

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