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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Volume XXXIX-B7, 2012
XXII ISPRS Congress, 25 August — 01 September 2012, Melbourne, Australia
AIRBORNE X-HH INCIDENCE ANGLE IMPACT ON CANOPY HEIGHT
RETREIVAL: IMPLICATIONS FOR SPACEBORNE X-HH TANDEM-X GLOBAL
CANOPY HEIGHT MODEL
M. Lorraine Tighe“”, Doug King”, Heiko Balzter‘’, Abderrazak Bannari”, Heather McNairn®
@ Intermap Technologies, Inc., 8310 South Valley Highway, Suite 400, Englewood, CO, 80112-5809 USA
® Carleton University, Dept. of Geography and Environmental Studies, 1125 Colonel By Dr. Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6, Canada
© University of Leicester, Centre for Landscape and Climate Research, Department of Geography, Leicester LE1 7RH, UK
« Department of Geography, University of Ottawa, 60 University, Simard 029, Ottawa, ON, Canada KIN 6N5
© Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, 960 Carling Avenue, Ottawa Ontario, K1A 0C6 Canada
Commission VII WG2: SAR Interferometry
KEY WORDS: Canopy Height, InSAR, X-band, DTM, DSM, DEM
ABSTRACT:
To support international climate change mitigation efforts, the United Nations REDD+ initiative (Reducing Emissions from
Deforestation and Degradation) seeks to reduce land use induced greenhouse gas emissions to the atmosphere. It requires
independent monitoring of forest cover and forest biomass information in a spatially explicit form. It is widely recognised that
remote sensing is required to deliver this information. Synthetic Aperture Radar interferometry (InSAR) techniques have gained
traction in the last decade as a viable technology from which vegetation canopy height and bare earth elevations can be derived. The
viewing geometry of a SAR sensor is side-looking where the radar pulse is transmitted out to one side of the aircraft or satellite,
defining an incidence angle (0) range. The incidence angle will change from near-range (NR) to far-range (FR) across of the track of
the SAR platform. InSAR uses image pairs and thus, contain two set of incidence angles. Changes in the InSAR incidence angles can
alter the relative contributions from the vegetation canopy and the ground surface and thus, affect the retrieved vegetation canopy
height. Incidence angle change is less pronounced in spaceborne data than in airborne data and mitigated somewhat when multiple
InSAR-data takes are combined. This study uses NEXTMap® single- and multi-pass X-band HH polarized InSAR to derive
vegetation canopy height from the scattering phase centre height (h,,.). Comparisons with in situ vegetation canopy height over three
test sites (Arizona-1, Minnesota-2); the effect of incidence angle changes across swath on the X-HH InSAR h,,, was examined.
Results indicate at steep incidence angles (6 = 35), more exposure of lower vegetation canopy structure (e.g. tree trunks) led to
greater lower canopy double bounce, increased ground scattering, and decreased volume scattering. This resulted in a lower
scattering phase centre height (h,,.) or a greater underestimation of vegetation canopy height given by the single-pass X-HH InSAR
data. The opposite effect occurs in the far range (0 = 55 ), an increase in volume scattering resulted in more accurate vegetation
canopy heights when compared to in situ measurements. These findings indicate that incidence angle corrections should be applied
to airborne X-HH single-pass InSAR. In contrast, NEXTMap X-HH (multi-pass data) h,,. data experienced little or no effect of
incidence angle, possibly because NEXTMap is an aggregation of multi-pass flight line strips, which averages data over several
incidence angles. These results may aid in the understanding of potential incidence angle effects in Astrium spaceborne Tandem-X
data, which will have global digital surface elevation coverage by 2015.
1. INTRODUCTION interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (cited as IFSAR or
InSAR in the literature) exhibit frequency-dependent sensitivity
Mapped estimates of vegetation canopy height of forests are
relevant to understanding carbon storage and cycling,
susceptibility to wildfire, changes in vegetation structure from
disturbance (e.g. insect outbreaks, wildfire, storms, forest
management practices such as thinning and logging), and
assessment of biodiversity and wildlife habitat. Furthermore,
vegetation canopy height is useful in obtaining more accurate
estimates of aboveground woody biomass and is a key indicator
of succession status (Balzter et al. 2007a). Knowledge of
vegetation canopy structure is required for modelling processes
such as photosynthesis, energy transfer, evapotranspiration, and
climate change at both local and global scales. Furthermore,
vegetation canopy height is of great value in many types of
regional- to global-scale modelling and is an essential precursor
to many techniques for extracting physical, topographic, and
cultural data for a plethora of applications. Examples of
applications include floodplain modelling, geological hazard
assessment, landslide analysis, urban planning, topographic and
geologic mapping, biomass studies, and land-fire initiatives,
amongst others. Digital surface models (DSMs) derived from
to the height of vegetation canopy elements (e.g. leaves, twigs,
branches, and tree trunks), and a number of investigators have
had success in retrieving estimates of canopy height from
interferometric measurements (Treuhaft and Siqueira, 2000;
Kellndorfer et al., 2004; Balzter et al., 2007a; 2007b; Walker et
al., 2007; Sexton et al., 2009). Methods to estimate vegetation
canopy height from InSAR techniques vary. One approach,
applied in this study, is to subtract an independent elevation
measurement of the bare ground surface (e.g. digital terrain
model — DTM) from the interferometric surface height (e.g.
digital surface model — DSM) to estimate the scattering phase
centre height (h,,.; Kellndorfer et al., 2004; Simard et al., 2006;
Andersen et al., 2008) to yield an estimate of vegetation canopy
height. While a significant amount of research has been
published on the application of InSAR for vegetation parameter
extraction—in particular for vegetation canopy height—
additional research is needed to gain further understanding of
the effect of incidence angle changes on InSAR derived
vegetation canopy height given by h,, and methods must be