Title: Active and Passive Microwave Remote Sensing
1Active and Passive Microwave Remote Sensing
Reading materials Chapter 9
2Basics of passive and active RS
- Passive uses natural energy, either reflected
sunlight (solar energy) or emitted thermal or
microwave radiation. - Active sensor creates its own energy
- Transmitted toward Earth or other targets
- Interacts with atmosphere and/or surface
- Reflects back toward sensor (backscatter)
3Widely used active RS systems
- Active microwave (RADAR RAdio Detection And
Ranging, read p285 for an explanation) - Long-wavelength microwaves (1 100 cm)
- LIDAR (LIght Detection And Ranging)
- Short-wavelength laser light (UV, visible, near
IR) - SONAR (SOund Navigation And Ranging)
- Sound waves through a water column.
- Sound waves extremely slow (300 m/s in air, 1,530
m/s in sea-water) - Bathymetric sonar (measure water depths and,
hence changes in bottom topography ) - Imaging sonar or sidescan imaging sonar (imaging
the bottom topography and bottom roughness) - It is not our focus in this remote sensing class.
4Microwaves
Band Designations (common wavelengths
Wavelength (?) Frequency (?) shown in
parentheses) in cm in
GHz ______________________________________________
_ Ka (0.86 cm) 0.75 - 1.18 40.0 to 26.5 K 1.18
- 1.67 26.5 to 18.0 Ku 1.67 - 2.4 18.0 to
12.5 X (3.0 and 3.2 cm) 2.4 - 3.8 12.5 - 8.0 C
(7.5, 6.0 cm) 3.8 - 7.5 8.0 - 4.0 S (8.0,
9.6, 12.6 cm) 7.5 - 15.0 4.0 - 2.0 L (23.5,
24.0, 25.0 cm) 15.0 - 30.0 2.0 - 1.0 P (68.0
cm) 30.0 - 100 1.0 - 0.3
51. Active microwave remote sensing
6Two active radar imaging systems
- In world war II, ground based radar was used to
detect incoming planes and ships. - Imaging RADAR was not developed until the 1950s
(after the world war II). Since then, the
side-looking airborne radar (SLAR) has been used
to get detail image of enemy sites along the edge
of the fight field. - Real aperture radar
- Aperture means antenna
- A fixed length (for example 1 - 11m)
- Synthetic aperture radar (SAR)
- 1m (11m) antenna can be synthesized
electronically into a 600m (15 km) synthetic
length. - Most (air-, space-borne) radar systems now use
SAR.
7Principle of SLAR
A CRT (cathode ray tube) shows a quick-look
display
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9Radar Nomenclature nadir azimuth (or flight)
direction look (or range) direction range
(near, middle, and far) depression angle (?)
incidence angle (?) altitude above-ground-level,
H polarization
?
?
10Polarization
- Unpolarized energy vibrates in all possible
directions perpendicular to the direction of
travel. - The pulse of electromagnetic energy is filtered
and sent out by the antenna may be vertically or
horizontally polarized. - The pulse of energy received by the antenna may
be vertically or horizontally polarized - VV, HH like-polarized imagery
- VH, HV- cross-polarized imagery
11- Lava flow in north-center Arizona
12Slant-range vs. Ground-range geometry
Radar imagery has a different geometry than that
produced by most conventional remote sensor
systems, such as cameras, multispectral scanners
or area-array detectors. Therefore, one must be
very careful when attempting to make
radargrammetric measurements. Uncorrected
radar imagery is displayed in what is called
slant-range geometry, i.e., it is based on the
actual distance from the radar to each of the
respective features in the scene. It is
possible to convert the slant-range display into
the true ground-range display on the x-axis so
that features in the scene are in their proper
planimetric (x,y) position relative to one
another in the final radar image.
13- Most radar systems and data providers now provide
the data in ground-range geometry
14Range (or across-track) Resolution
Pulse duration (t) 0.1 x 10 -6 sec
- t.c called pulse length. It seems the short pulse
length will lead fine range resolution. - However, the shorter the pulse length, the less
the total amount of energy that illuminates the
target.
t.c/2
t.c/2
15Azimuth (or along-track) Resolution
- The shorter wavelength and longer antenna will
improve azimuth resolution. - The shorter the wavelength, the poorer the
atmospheric and vegetation penetration capability - There is practical limitation to the antenna
length, while SAR will solve this problem.
16Synthetic Aperture Radar - SAR
A major advance in radar remote sensing has been
the improvement in azimuth resolution through the
development of synthetic aperture radar (SAR)
systems. Great improvement in azimuth resolution
could be realized if a longer antenna were used.
Engineers have developed procedures to synthesize
a very long antenna electronically. Like a brute
force or real aperture radar, a synthetic
aperture radar also uses a relatively small
antenna (e.g., 1 m) that sends out a relatively
broad beam perpendicular to the aircraft. The
major difference is that a greater number of
additional beams are sent toward the object.
Doppler principles are then used to monitor the
returns from all these additional microwave
pulses to synthesize the azimuth resolution to
become one very narrow beam.
Azimuth resolution is constant D/2, it
is independent of the slant range distance, ? ,
and the platform altitude.
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19Fundamental radar equation
t
20Amount of backscatter per unit area
21Intermediate
22Penetration ability to forest
Response of A Pine Forest Stand to X-, C- and
L-band Microwave Energy
23Penetration ability to subsurface
24Roughness and Penetration ability
to subsurface
Railway
hw90
Radar Image
ETM Image
Xie et al., 2004
25Penetration ability to heavy rainfall
SIR-C/X-SAR Images of a Portion of Rondonia,
Brazil, Obtained on April 10, 1994
26Radar Shadow
- Shadows in radar images can enhance the
geomorphology and texture of the terrain. Shadows
can also obscure the most important features in a
radar image, such as the information behind tall
buildings or land use in deep valleys. If certain
conditions are met, any feature protruding above
the local datum can cause the incident pulse of
microwave energy to reflect all of its energy on
the foreslope of the object and produce a black
shadow for the backslope - Unlike airphotos, where light may be scattered
into the shadow area and then recorded on film,
there is no information within the radar shadow
area. It is black. - Two terrain features (e.g., mountains) with
identical heights and fore- and backslopes may be
recorded with entirely different shadows,
depending upon where they are in the
across-track. A feature that casts an extensive
shadow in the far-range might have its backslope
completely illuminated in the near-range. - Radar shadows occur only in the cross-track
dimension. Therefore, the orientation of shadows
in a radar image provides information about the
look direction and the location of the near- and
far-range
27Shadows and look direction
Shuttle Imaging Radar (SIR-C) Image of Maui
28Radar Noise Speckle
- Speckle is a grainy salt-and-pepper pattern in
radar imagery present due to the coherent nature
of the radar wave, which causes random
constructive and destructive interference, and
hence random bright and dark areas in a radar
image. The speckle can be reduced by processing
separate portions of an aperture and recombining
these portions so that interference does not
occur. This process, called multiple looks or
non-coherent integration, produces a more
pleasing appearance, and in some cases may aid in
interpretation of the image but at a cost of
degraded resolution. N (D/2)
N, number of looks D, antenna length
29Another way to remove speckle noise
Blurred objects and boundary
Statistical algorithms Geometric algorithms
G-MAP
Gamma Maximum A Posteriori Filter
Xie et al., 2004
30Striping Noise and Removal
CPCA
Combined Principle Component Analysis
Xie et al., 2004
31Major Active Radar Systems
- Seasat, June 1978, 105 days mission, L-HH band,
25 m resolution - SIR-A, Nov. 1981, 2.5 days mission, L-HH band, 40
m resolution - SIR-B, Oct. 1984, 8 days mission, L-HH band,
about 25 m resolution - SIR-C, April and Sept. 1994, 10 days each. X-,
C-, L- bands multipolarization (HH, VV, HV, VH),
10-30 m resolution, - JERS-1, 1992-1998, L-band, 15-30 m resolution,
(Japan) - RADARSAT, Jan. 1995-now, C-HH band, 10, 50,
and 100 m, (Canada) - ERS-1, 2, July 1991-now, C-VV band, 20-30 m,
(European) - AIRSAR/TOPSAR, 1998-now, C,L,P bands with full
polarization, 10m, - NEXRAD, 1988-now, S-band, 1-4 km,
- TRMM precipitation radar, 1997, Ku-band, 4km,
vertical 250m, (USA and -
Japan)
32Advantages of active radar
- All weather, day or night
- Some areas of Earth are persistently cloud
covered - Penetrates clouds, vegetation, dry soil, dry snow
- Sensitive to water content (soil moisture),
roughness - Can measure waves
- Sensitive to polarization
- Interferometry
332. Passive microwave remote sensing
34Principals
- While dominate wavelength of Earth is 9.7 um, a
continuum of energy is emitted from Earth to the
atmosphere. In fact, the Earth passively emits a
steady stream of microwave energy, though it is
relatively weak in intensity. - A suit of radiometers developed can record it.
They measure the brightness temperature of the
terrain or the atmosphere. This is much like the
thermal infrared radiometer for temperature. - A matrix of brightness temperature values can
then be used to construct a passive microwave
image.
35Jeff Dozier
36Some important passive microwave radiometers
- Special Sensor Mirowave/Imager (SSM/I)
- It was onboard the Defense Meterorological
Satellite Program (DMSP) since 1987 - It measure the microwave brightness temperatures
of atmosphere, ocean, and terrain at 19.35,
22.23, 37, and 85.5 GHz. - TRMM microwave imager (TMI)
- It is based on SSM/I, and added one more
frequency of 10.7 GHz.
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