Full text: XVIIIth Congress (Part B4)

  
Foreshortening 1 
  
  
  
Foreshortening 2 
  
  
Layover 
  
  
Figure 1: lllustration of foreshortening and layover. A de- 
crease in sensor look angle (from top to bottom) leads to 
successively narrower foreshortening areas, and finally to lay- 
over. 
culate the slopes of the viewed terrain. The application of a 
multiple image SAR shape-from-shading algorithm to Mag- 
ellan data is reported by [Leberl, 1991]. However, if layover 
areas are not recognized as such, the bright layover pixels 
caused by superposition of multiple scatterers are misinter- 
preted as produced by terrain slopes alone. Therefore, we 
believe that the recognition and proper treatment of layover 
can be used for a refinement of both stereo and shape-from 
shading derived DEMs. An improvement of the DEM in lay- 
over areas can be of special interest in planetary sciences, 
since steep slopes which lead to layover are often particularly 
interesting features for geological and geophysical interpreta- 
tions. 
In the following we present a concept for the automated de- 
tection and exploitation of layover in Magellan SAR imagery, 
and describe the first steps of its implementation. In particu- 
lar, we address the use of simulation for the generation of test 
data, and the development of a matching algorithm specially 
suited to SAR foreshortening and layover regions. First tests 
on simulated imagery indicate that our matching method can 
be utilized for a refinement of stereo-derived DEMs in layover 
areas. 
284 
   
(a) (b) 
Figure 2: A stereo image pair from the Magellan data set, 
captured with a look angle of 40 deg (a) and 21 deg (b). 
Image size is approximately 17 km x 22 km. The apparent 
changes in the central part of the image were classified as 
layover by stereoscopy. 
   
(a) (b) (c) 
Figure 3: Three views of an area on Venus' surface, acquired 
from the left with a look angle of 34 deg (a) and 17.5 deg 
(b) during Cycles | and III, repectively, and from the right at 
25 deg (c) during Cycle Il. The region marked by an arrow 
was classified as layover in (a) and (b) by [Connors, 1994]. 
2 CONCEPT AND PREVIOUS WORK 
Our approach is motivated by a study on the extraction 
of height information from Magellan data carried out by 
[Connors, 1994]. In that work, discretely dipping surfaces 
related to faulting were investigated in the context of geo- 
physical applications. The features of interest appear in the 
SAR image as bands of increased brightness, which are either 
foreshortening or layover areas. The proposed algorithm re 
constructs terrain slopes, and at the same time distinguishes 
between foreshortening and layover. Its basic idea can be 
outlined as follows (see Fig.3): First, corresponding areas 
are identified in the Cycle I/1ll same-side stereo pair. Then, 
the across-track widths of the two areas of interest are used 
along with knowledge about the corresponding sensor look 
angle to calculate two possible solutions for the terrain slope. 
These two solutions reflect an ambiguity between foreshort- 
ening and layover which arises for one of the stereo images 
In order to resolve this ambiguity, the opposite-side image aC 
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B4. Vienna 1996 
  
  
  
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