STUDY ON RADAR DIFFERENTIAL INTERFEROMETRY TECHNOLOGY
AND IT’S APPLICATION TO MANI EARTHQUAKE USING ERS-1/2 SAR DATA:
A CASE STUDY IN CHINA
Qulin Tan **, Siwen Bi * Bin Wang *, Songlin Yang *
? School of Civil Engineering & Architecture, Beijing Jiaotong University, Beijing, 100044, China - qulintan@sina.com
? Institute of Remote Sensing Applications, CAS, Beijing, 100101, China — bisw(@irsa.irsa.ac.cn
KEY WORDS: SAR, Earthquakes, Recognition, Mapping, Measurement, Change Detection
ABSTRACT:
Mani Earthquake, occurred on Nov. 8, 1997 in Tibet, China, 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. The data set related
to our study area are ERS1/2 SLC SAR images (April 15, April 16, 1996 ERS-1 and Dec. 2, 1997 ERS-2) provided by European
Space Agency. We analyzed factors related to the surface deformation detecting: interferogram along the Margaichace-Ruolacuo
fault under the special regional environmental conditions. From the changing interferogram, we concluded that the zone around
Margaichace-Ruolacuo fault is the most severely deformed and the most possibly rupturing area; epicenter is located in this zone.
Also we concluded from analyzing the fringe patterns that left-lateral shear movement is the whole deforming mechanism,
furthermore, the offsets are also quantitatively estimated. We inferred that the horizontal offset displacement for the southern side at
least reaches 2.8m and 1.75m at least for the northern side of the fault. All these results agree well with the slip measured in the field,
with the displacement measured by surveying, and with the results of an elastic dislocation model.
1. INTRODUCTION
Radar differential interferometry is an up-to-date measurement
technology. It is now possible to detect subtle changes in the
Earth’s surfaces over periods of days to years with a scale
(global), accuracy (millimeters), and reliability (day or night, all
weather) that are unprecedented. The basic principle of the
technique involves interferometric phase comparison of a series
of SAR images. To date many examples illustrate how SAR
differential interferometry can be applied to the study of
coseismic deformation generated by an earthquake (Gabriel A.
K, Goldstein R. M. and Zebker H. A. 1989; Gens R, Genderen
V. J. 1996). Because of its unique capability, which no other
technique provides high-spatial-resolution maps of earthquake
deformation, these pioneering studies have generated enormous
interest in the Earth science community because they point to
an entirely new way to study the surface of the Earth.
Although the techniques are now well documented in the
international literature, only an example of acquisition of high
accuracy DEM using SIR-C interferometric data has been
reported in China (Wang Chao, 1997). For short of
interferometric data source, the application examples of SAR
interferometry is few as a whole in China, and the case study of
differential SAR interferometry for mapping surface
deformation is further much less. Along with the development
of radar remote sensing, more and more SAR interferometric
data would be available and China will certainly receive its own
independent interferometric data source in the future. So it has
become increasingly important to understand the limitations of
the processing and the acquisition method itself for Chinese
geoscientists.
" Corresponding author.
On the other hand, many Chinese geologic scientists are
unfamiliar with SAR interferometry and its potential new
applications, and its technical limitations need to be more fully
explored. In an attempt to understand the principle and the
influencing factors involved with repeat-pass space-borne SAR
systems, such as the European Space Agency's ERS-1/2, 1
examined an area around Mani, a region in Tibet, China using
SAR differential interferometry. In this paper, ! will provide a
brief description of the principle and processing steps, discuss
the influencing parameters related to topography, and present
the resultant changing interferogram calculated from the ERS-
1/2 data. These are objectives of the study.
2. PRINCIPLE OF SAR DIFFERENTIAL
INTERFEROMETRY
The development of differential SAR interferometry is based on
SAR interferometry technique, and the interferometric data can
be acquired by two antennae on the same platform, or by one
antenna on "repeating" its orbit (Rodriguez E. 1992), and J. M.
Martin. Because all space-borne SARs in run are single-band
and single-antenna systems, many published literatures related
to the technique have been used repeat-pass interferometric data.
If ignoring some parameters influencing the quality of SAR
interferometric data, such as atmospheric differences at the two
times of imaging, internal clock drift, weather conditions,
system noise et al, we present the interferometer geometry and
range difference attributable to three factors: 1) A spherical
earth with no topography, 2) topography, and 3) surface
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