employed that seek to minimize their influence, (Izzawati et al.,
2006; Woodhouse et al., 2006; Balzter et al., 2007a).
The aim of this paper to assess the impact of incidence angle
changes on the ability of airborne short-wavelength (X-band)
InSAR data to retrieve accurate vegetation canopy height
estimates for shrub, deciduous, coniferous, mixed forest, and
wetland vegetation. This will be achieved using Intermap
Technologies NEXTMap multi-pass and single-pass X-band,
horizontal transmit and receive polarization (X-HH) InSAR
data. This assessment was performed over three sites in the
United States. In particular, the nature and extent of vegetation
canopy height underestimation at different incidence angles and
the conditions under which they are most likely to occur for the
single-pass InSAR configuration were investigated. Section 2
introduces the concept of SAR viewing geometry and scattering
phase centre heights from InSAR data. Section 3 gives a brief
description of the data and study sites addressed in this analysis,
followed by Section 4, which provides the methodology utilized
to access the vertical accuracy of the NEXTMap X-HH InSAR
data over three incidence angles in flat terrain (e.g. slopes less
than 10). In Section 5, the test results are presented. Section 6
concludes the paper with some discussions of future work.
2. INSAR INCIDENCE ANGLE AND SCATTERING
PHASE CENTRE HEIGHT BACKGROUND
The side-looking SAR sensor configuration defines an
incidence angle range (0) that is determined by how far from
nadir (H — Figure 2) the SAR beam points out to the side. The
incidence angle range will change from the near-range (NR) to
mid-range (MR) to far-range (FR) across the swath (Figure 1).
This type of viewing geometry can lead to geometric distortions
in InSAR elevation data. Furthermore, changes of incidence
angle modify the relative contribution from structural vegetation
canopy elements (leaves, twigs, branches, tree trunk) and
ground surfaces. Due to the different flying altitude, NR — FR
incidence angle changes are more pronounced in airborne data,
than in spaceborne data. In the case of the airborne X-band
InSAR (e.g. NEXTMap) sensor used in this study, the incidence
angle ranges from 35 in NR to 55 in FR, centred on 45 (MR).
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
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Figure 1. Scanning configuration of right-looking rectangular
SAR antenna, modified after Olmsted (1993), to show antenna
length (L), antenna width (D), and pulse duration (T).
The X-HH InSAR DSM minus an accurate digital terrain model
(DTM) determines the scattering phase centre height (ho:
which is an average of all vertically distributed scattering
elements within a SAR resolution cell (Figure 2). Note, at X-
band there is penetration into the vegetation canopy (red line,
Figure 3). X-HH derived hg, is at or very near bare ground
(Mercer, 2001; blue dashed line, Figure 3) in barren areas;
whereas in forest canopies the location of hy, depends on the
penetration depth of microwaves into the canopy. This depth
depends on wavelength, incidence angle, size and density
distribution of the scattering elements, geometric arrangement
of the scatterers, canopy moisture condition, surface roughness,
and moisture content of the ground layer (Andersen et al., 2006;
Izzawati et al., 2006; Woodhouse et al., 2006). Vegetation
canopy heights given by X-HH InSAR hg, data are typically
located in the upper portion of the vegetation canopy.
Figure 2. DSM (yellow line) minus DTM (red line) is the hg.
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Figure 3. Relative position of X-HH InSAR hg, for a dense
forest, bare ground, and true canopy height (red, blue and white
dashed lines, respectively.
Incidence angle variations across swath will change the relative
signal contribution from features on the ground (Woodhouse et
al., 2006). For example, steep incidence angles (e.g. 6 = 35)
permit more exposure of the lower portion of a vegetation
canopy such that there is greater signal interaction with trunks
and lower vegetation leading to greater volume scattering if
there is understory, or if little to no understory, greater double
bounce, and greater ground scattering contributions resulting in
a lower scattering phase centre height (hg, Figure 4 left — steep
incidence angle). The opposite effect occurs in the FR (Figure 4
— right shallow incidence angle).
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Figure 4. Incidence angle effects on hy, retrieval for a forest
across one flight line strip of data from NR (steep incidence
angle) to FR (shallow incidence angle).
It is anticipated that incidence angle range of a single
interferometric data-take (e.g. one flight line strip of data) will
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