International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B7. Istanbul 2004
In the primed interferogram, the phase @ is
1 ÀE in
$-2—(B*^o) — (9
The surface displacement Ap adds to the topographic phase
term, which could create confusion in the interpretation.
However, if the data from the initial unprimed interferogram are
; : : Bj,
properly scaled with a proportional factor —L and subtracted
//
from the primed interferogram, we can obtain a solution
dependent only on Ap , as follows:
, B, dr
dim A
? 5," A p 9)
Since the quantity on the left is determined entirely by the
phases of the interferograms and the orbit geometries, the line-
of-sight component of the displacement Ap is measurable for
each point in the scene.
For operational use, a common method is that the baseline
parameters of primed interferogram are used to simulate the
unprimed interferogram derived from only topography effects,
which then is subtracted from primed interferogram. The
resulted differential interferogram contains only the information
related to surface deformation.
It is important to assess the relative sensitivity of the phase
measurement to topography and displacement since the
topography itself may be poorly known. From the imaging
geometry, it can be seen in Fig.1 that the height z of the point z
(y) can be determined by:
z = H — pcos0 (10)
where H is the flying height. The relative sensitivity of the
phase may be derived by differentiating Eq. (10) with respect to
6:
dz = psin dO (11)
And also we can differentiate Eq. (8) with respect to Oand
displacement Ap . Because of the irrelevance between Ap and
B, and recalling Eq. (4), we can obtain Eq. (12) and Eq. (13):
dg’ - D B'cos(0 — a°)d0 (12)
d)! 4z
d^p À
(13)
For the displacement case, we have Eq. (13). Combining Eq.
(11) with (12), we can obtain Eq. (14):
dé 4z B'cos(0 —') (14)
dz À psin
Since baseline length (a few hundred meters) is much less than
p (a few hundred kilometers for a spacecraft system), it is
. ~ ^ . / C , .
evident from Equation (13) and (14) that — 1s much smaller
dz
,
than . Thus, the measured phase is much less sensitive to
d^p
topography (Eq. (14)) compared to displacement (Eq. (13)).
When the accuracy of measuring topography using SAR
interferometry reaches the level of meter, the accuracy for
measuring deformation displacement can reach the level of
centimeter or Millimeter. Comparing the two results
numerically for the case of ERS-1, 1 m of topography gives a
phase signature of 4.3 degree (actually less than the real noise
limit about 20 degree, implying that ERS-1 is not sensitive to
topography at this level). However, for the same pass pair, a |-
m surface displacement yields a phase signature of 12,800
degree, or nearly 3000 times greater sensitivity. Since we seek
to measure 1-cm surface changes, this implies that we require
topographic data accurate to about 3000x 1 em, or +30m.
3. CASE STUDY
The Mani Earthquake occurred 10:02:55.4 a.m. (UTC) on Nov.
8, 1997 around 150km away from Mani country in Naqu region,
Tibet, China. The location of epicenter is 8733 E, .35.260?N.1
the depth of 40km, the magnitude of Ms7.4 measured by China
earthquake observation network. Concerning the earthquake,
the data measured by NEIC (National Earthquake Information
Center of America) are that: time is 10:02:54.9 a.m. (UTC)
location of epicenter is 87.37^E/135.1 1?N the depth of 35km,
and the magnitude of Ms7.9 (Feng Hao, 1997).
Mani Earthquake is the strongest event in China since 90's in
20 century. Investigation and research of its principle and
geometry, dynamics related to surface rupture zone is very
significant to analyze the development and evolution of China's
earthquake in the future. In this study, we investigate the
distribution of surface deformation and extract displacement
information of the earthquake rupture zone using differential
SAR (ERS1/2 SAR) interferometry.
3.1 Site Background and Data Source
The epicenter of Mani earthquake is located the nearly east to
west Margaichace-Ruolacuo fault zone along the northern
boundaries of Qiang-Tang block, south of Chaoyang lake. The
Margaichace-Ruolacuo fault extends approximately 270km and
has experienced strong events since Holocene epoch. Remote
sensing images around this area are characterized by less
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