Remote Sensing Microwave Image. 1. Penetration of Radar Signal ► ► Radar signals are able to penetrate some solid features, e.g. soil surface and vegetative.

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Presentation transcript:

Remote Sensing Microwave Image

1. Penetration of Radar Signal ► ► Radar signals are able to penetrate some solid features, e.g. soil surface and vegetative covers

1. Penetration of Radar Signal ► ► Skin depth - the depth to which the strength of a signal is reduced to 1/e (approx. 37%) of its surface magnitude - skin depth increases with wavelength, absence of moisture, surface roughness, and depression angle

2. Polarization ► ► HH image - radar transmits horizontally polarized signals and receives the horizontally polarized return signal ► ► HV image - radar transmits horizontally polarized signals but receives vertically polarized signals

2. Polarization ► ► Most radar produce HH images, some are designed to produce both. There are also VH and VV images

2. Polarization ► ► Depolarization - the horizontally polarized microwave energy is changed into vertically polarized energy - depolarizers on the ground appear brighter on HV image - rough surface and inhomogeneous subsurface are depolarizers

3. Synthetic Aperture Radar Systems (SAR) ► ► Real aperture SLAR system - the oldest, simplest, and least expensive of radar systems ► ► Synthetic Aperture Systems (SAR) - use an array of real antennas to synthesize the effect of a very long antenna

3. Synthetic Aperture Systems (SAR) ► ► Doppler effect - objects experience different frequency shifts in relation to their distances from the aircraft track - objects at the leading edge of a beam reflect pulses with higher frequency than those at the trailing edge

3. Synthetic Aperture Systems (SAR) ► ► Doppler effect - the frequency shift allows the system to assign reflections to features at their correct positions

4. Reflectance ► ► Incidence angle - the angle between the axis of the incident radar signal and a perpendicular to the surface that the signal strikes ► ► Specular reflection ► ► Diffuse reflection ► ► Corner reflection

4. Reflectance ► ► Specular reflection - when surface is smooth relative to the wavelength - incident angle = reflection angle

4. Reflectance ► ► Diffuse reflection - when surface is rough relative to the wavelength - the signal will be scattered equally all directions

4. Reflectance ► ► Corner reflection - a double reflection caused by adjacent smooth surface - high reflectance appears as sparkles on the image - tends to be proportionately larger than its real size

5. Radar Image Brightness ► ► Geometric characteristics - slope facing with respect to sensor determines signal returns - surface roughness determines the type and amount of returns

5. Radar Image Brightness ► ► Electrical characteristics - Complex Dielectric Constant: water 80, most material 3-8 when dry - moisture content is more significant than material themselves in increasing reflectance - metal objects have high returns, e.g. metal bridges, silos

6. Natural Features Response ► ► Soil responses - top soil moisture gives high returns and - limits penetration of radar waves

6. Natural Features Response ► ► Vegetation responses - when = plant size or plant is dense, the return is high - high moisture content returns more energy - HH polarized sensing penetrates vegetation more than HV

6. Natural Features Response ► ► Water and ice responses - smooth water yields specular reflectance with no return - rough water surface returns with various strength - ice age, surface roughness, snow cover etc. affect returns

Readings ► Chapter 8

1. Penetration of Radar Signal <- Long wavelength Short wavelength ->

Synthetic Aperture Radar