Atmospheric Effects on InSAR Measurements in Southern China
and Australia: A Comparative Study
X L Dine". L Ge Z, W. Li* C, Rizos”
"Dept. of Land Surveying and Geo-Informatics, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hung Hom, Hong Kong, China -
(Isxlding, zhiwei.li) 9 polyu.edu.hk
"School of Surveying and Spatial Information Systems, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia -
(l.ge, c.rizos) €? unsw.edu.au
KEY WORDS: InSAR, Radon, Gaussianity, Bispectrum, Power spectrum
ABSTRACT:
Satellite synthetic aperture radar (SAR) signals are often seriously contaminated by atmospheric delays. The state of the atmosphere,
especially the atmospheric water vapor, varies significantly both in space and with time. It is necessary to understand the
characteristics of the atmospheric variations in order to devise appropriate means for the mitigation of the effects.
We use interferograms generated from some ERS tandem pairs covering Hong Kong, Shanghai of southern China and New South
Wales of Australia to study the characteristics of the atmospheric effects in these areas. The anisotropy and Gaussianity oi the
atmospheric effects are first examined with the method of Radon transform and Hinich test and then compared in terms of different
regions and climate patterns. The spectral feagures of the atmospheric effects are then analyzed with the method of Fast Fourier
Transform (FFT) and power spectrum. The implication of the results on practical Interferometric SAR (InSAR) measurements,
especially on the modeling and correction of the ajmospneric effects are examined.
1 Introduction
Repeat-pass InSAR measurements can be significantly affected
by the atmosphere (e.g., Massonnet and Feijl, 1995; Rosen et
al., 1996; Tarayre and Massonnet, 1996; Zebker et al., 1997). It
is useful to characterize the effects for different regions due to
the highly variable nature of the effects in place and time.
Beside enabling us to understanding the effect better, such
studies will also offer useful results for the modeling and
mitigaton of the results. In addition, the unprecedented spatial
resolution of InSAR also makes it a useful too to study the
atmosphere.
This paper will first generate a number of differential SAR
interferograms, covering Shanghai, Hong Kong of southern
China and New South Wales of Australia that reveals the
atmospheric signals in the regions. The atmospheric signals are
then studied comparatively for the different regions to
determine such parameters of the signals as isotropy,
Gaussianity and spectral features. Finally the implications of
the results on modeling and mitigating the atmospheric effects
on InSAR measurements are discussed.
2 Extraction of Atmospheric Signals from SAR
Interferograms
A SAR interferogram generated by complex conjugate
multiplication of two SAR images is a superposition of
topographic information, surface deformation and atmospheric
propagation delay variations between the two acquisitions, and
noise (e.g., Tarayre and Massonnet, 1996; Hanssen et al., 1999;
Li et al., 2003). The contribution from the topography can be
removed by using a reference elevation model. That from the
surface deformation can be neglected or removed if the
deformation of the Study area between the two
ma image
acquisitions 1s insignificant or the deformation is known,
Besides, multi-looking operation and careful interferometric
processing are also needed to Suppress the noise. The
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atmospheric signatures can then be obtained by removing the
topographic and deformation terms (Hansen et al., 1999).
We choose a tandem pair covering Shanghai, Hong Kong and
New South Wales respectively in this study (see Table 1). It is
safe to assume that there is no ground deformation phase in the
SAR interferograms over such a short time interval. The
topographic phases are removed based on external DEMs. For
the Shanghai study region, the SRTM 3 arc-second DEM is
used. Its accuracy is about 10m and it can potentially introduce
a phase error of less than 0.05 cycles for an ambiguity height of
216 m (See Table 1). For Hong Kong region, a DEM from the
Lands Department of the Hong Kong Government with an
accuracy of about 10 m is used. It can cause a phase error of
about 0.1 cycles. For the New South Wales region, the accuracy
of the DEM is about 15 m and the phase error caused is less
than 0.1 cycles. Therefore, for the three interferograms, the
phase errors from DEM errors are negligible.
Precise ERS1 and ERS2 orbits from The Delft University of
Technology are used in the processing to reduce errors from co-
registration and flat earth phase removing (Scharroo et al.
1998). To suppress noise, the SAR images are processed by
multi-looking operation with 10 pixels in azimuth and 2 pixels
in range directions to get a final resolution of about 40 m by 40
m. Since the residue satellite orbit error and ionosphere will
possibly introduce a linear phase ramp in interferogram
(Tarayre and Massonnet, 1996: Hanssen, 1998), careful
baseline refining and linear phase ramp removing procedures
are also included in the interferometric processing (Atlantis,
2003). The differential interferograms and differential
atmospheric delay signals in mm (mapped from unwrapped
phases) for the three study regions are shown in Figure 1, 2 and
3, respectively.
International
1
Figure |. Dif
atmospheric i
square regior
Figure 2. D
atmospheric
A square reg