Full text: XVIIIth Congress (Part B1)

ey have a sig- 
global climate 
the global sea 
e behavior. 
altimetry data. 
ibutd data, to- 
ps that contain 
‘the system is 
nt attitude in- 
le and 400 km 
ed analys con- 
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al missions in 
n can be con- 
etry program. 
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h Observation 
in 2002. 
-200 m wide 
; a dense data 
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ontinuous and 
for mass bal- 
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n profiles can 
s wind gener- 
ons. 
>n carried out 
| topographic 
brief descrip- 
' of raw data 
follows. The 
in the Jakob- 
] its compari- 
2. LASER ALTIMETRY FROM SPACECRAFT 
Satellite laser altimeters have been developed at NASA, to 
study the Earth, the Moon, and the Mars (Bufton, 1989). Verti- 
cal resolution of a few centimeters can be achieved from space- 
craft by employing gain switched solid state lasers with a pulse 
length of 1-10 nsec. The footprint size on the surface is in the 
order of 50-300 m (Gardner, 1992). Because of the orbital alti- 
tude of several 100 km the precise knowledge of the pointing 
direction and high stability is required. For example for the 
GLAS system the position will obtained from GPS, and the 
attitude determination will be based on stellar cameras and INS. 
2.1 Analysis of Laser Altimetry Waveform 
The range between the spacecraft and the surface is determined 
from the round-trip propagation time of short laser pulses. To 
estimate the timing performance of the laser altimeters and to 
derive other useful surface parameters, such as surface rough- 
ness and albedo, the knowledge of the received waveform is 
essential. Several factors, such as terrain variations within the 
laser footprint, nadir angle effects, and the curvature of the laser 
beam contribute to the spreading of the reflected pulse. The 
detected signal is also contaminated by optical and electronic 
noise. 
In special cases, such as flat or uniformly sloped terrain, the 
laser altimeter's detection statistics and timing performance can 
expressed in closed form (Gardner, 1992). As a complementary 
approach to the analytical calculations, the Goddard Laser Al- 
timetry Simulator (Abshire at al., 1994) is suitable for evaluat- 
a) Estimated and Actual Terrain 
  
    
  
|. SEA ICE 
^ SURFACE 
TTTTTTTTTTTY 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
60 80 100 120 140 160 
Along track distance (meters) 
Receiver Waveform 
0.1.0: he dei dt ctecducde À sd 1 
0.081 - 
2 0064 - 
© J 
> ] 
0.04 - 
0.024 3 
0.00 bor e Sp 
0 100 200 300 400 500 
Time (100ps) 
ing the laser altimeter performance over a wide range of condi- 
tions. 
The simulator uses a simplified 2-D measurement geometry 
(height vs. along track distance). The terrain surface is assumed 
to be a Lambertian reflector, and its reflectivity and height can 
be specified for every centimeter of the along-track distance. 
The surface parameters can be randomized using first and sec- 
ond order Markov processes. The simulator computes the 
waveform as it is propagated to and from the terrain surface 
and, after detection through the altimeter receiver. The surface 
elevation is estimated in the following fashion. First the coarse 
range is calculated as the time interval between the laser firing 
and the receiver's first threshold time. Then a fine range cor- 
rection is computed from the waveform. Finally a correction is 
applied to remove the effect of the low-pass filtering in the 
receiver. An example of the computed waveforms is given in 
Figure 1. The estimated surface elevation is marked with a tri- 
angle in Figure 1.a. 
The shape of the received waveform is closely related to the 
height distribution within the laser footprint (Bufton, 1989). For 
many applications, the determination of surface slope or rough- 
ness is of considerable interest. In case of horizontal, random, 
rough, Lambertian surfaces the surface roughness within the 
laser footprint can be computed from the pulse spreading. An 
algorithm based on the analytic solution described in (Gardner, 
1992) is recommended for the estimation of sea ice surface 
roughness in (Csatho and Thomas, 1995b). 
b) Spacetime Waveform 
100 er ET ee lt 
  
80- 
601 r 
Photons 
40 4 : 
201 
  
  
  
ODOL d 
0 100 
TT TT TT 
200 300 400 500 
Time(100ps) 
d) Digitizer Waveform 
1004 EE 
  
801 - 
60- - 
40] - 
A/D Counts 
207 L 
  
  
  
‘200 300 400 
Time (100ps) 
Tr 
097.7300 
Figure 1: Simulated laser altimetry waveforms for GLAS system computed the Goddard Laser Altimetry Simulator. Surface was 
created from sea ice elevations measured by airborne laser altimetry. 
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B1. Vienna 1996 
  
  
 
	        
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