4.7 Article

Tectonic and Anthropogenic Deformation at the Cerro Prieto Geothermal Step-Over Revealed by Sentinel-1A InSAR

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING
Volume 55, Issue 9, Pages 5284-5292

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TGRS.2017.2704593

Keywords

Atmospheric correction; geometric coregistration; land subsidence; synthetic aperture radar (SAR) interferometry (InSAR); tectonic deformation; terrain observation by progressive scan (TOPS); time series

Funding

  1. NASA Earth Surface and Interior Program [NNX16AK93G]
  2. National Science Foundation (NSF) Geoinfomatics Program [EAR-1347204]
  3. Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) through the NSF [EAR-1033462]
  4. U.S. Geological Survey [G12AC20038]

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The Cerro Prieto geothermal field (CPGF) lies at the step-over between the imperial and the Cerro Prieto faults in northern Baja California, Mexico. While tectonically this is the most active section of the southern San Andreas Fault system, the spatial and temporal deformation in the area is poorly resolved by the sparse global positioning system (GPS) network coverage. Moreover, interferograms from satellite observations spanning more than a few months are decorrelated due to the extensive agricultural activity in this region. Here we investigate the use of frequent, short temporal baseline interferograms offered by the new Sentinel-1A satellite to recover two components of deformation time series across these faults. Following previous studies, we developed a purely geometric approach for image alignment that achieves better than 1/200 pixel alignment needed for accurate phase recovery. We construct interferometric synthetic aperture radar time series using a coherence-based small baseline subset method with atmospheric corrections by means of common-point stacking. We did not apply enhanced spectral diversity because the burst discontinuities are generally small (<1.4 mm) and can be effectively captured during the atmospheric corrections. With these algorithms, the subsidence at CPGF is clearly resolved. The maximum subsidence rate of 160 mm/yr, due to extraction of geothermal fluids and heat, dominates the similar to 40 mm/yr deformation across the proximal ends of the imperial, the Cerro Prieto, and the indiviso faults.

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