Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2014

Presentation information

Oral

Symbol S (Solid Earth Sciences) » S-TT Technology & Techniques

[S-TT59_29AM2] Synthetic Aperture Radar

Tue. Apr 29, 2014 11:00 AM - 12:40 PM 414 (4F)

Convener:*Tsutomu Yamanokuchi(Remote Sensing Technology Center of JAPAN), Tomokazu Kobayashi(Geospatial Information Authority of Japan), Yosuke Miyagi(National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention), Chair:Yosuke Miyagi(National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention), Yu Morishita(Geospatial Information Authority of Japan)

12:05 PM - 12:20 PM

[STT59-12] Correction by GNSS data for wide area InSAR analysis

*Yu MORISHITA1 (1.GSI of Japan)

Keywords:InSAR, GNSS

InSAR results include not only deformation signals but also noises caused by orbital inaccuracies, tropospheric delay and ionospheric delay. Orbital inaccuracies yield a residual orbital phase ramp. As spatial wavelengths of tropospheric and ionospheric noise are typically long, the effect is trivial for a small area but it can be significant for a large area.Tropospheric noise can be mitigated by estimating the amount of tropospheric delay from a numerical weather model. However, the mitigation does not always work because of the limitation of spatial and temporal resolution of the numerical weather model. There is no common and effective technique to correct ionospheric noise so far while several techniques have been proposed. The ionospheric noise remains a big problem because, in particular, L-band is greatly affected by ionospheric noise. A residual orbital phase ramp can be reduced by flattening the phase in an area with no deformation. Another effective correction method is estimating model parameters (e.g. bilinear surface) to fit other deformation data such as GNSS continuous observation (Tobita et al., 2005; Fukushima and Hooper, 2011). This method works even if the deformation extends the entire area (Kobayashi, 2011). However, if the area is wide, a bilinear surface model is not sufficient because of noises with long wavelengths. A spline interpolation method has been proposed to overcome this problem (Fukushima, 2013).In this presentation, I will report a GNSS correction technique using a natural interpolation method for scattered points. This technique can mitigate not only residual orbital phase ramps but also noises with long wavelength. Adjusting correction steps enables realistic extrapolations while conventional steps sometimes result in outliers in extrapolated areas. The results of wide area time series InSAR analysis using ALOS/PALSAR data show less noise and more apparent phase changes with shorter wavelength than the interval of the GNSS stations.ReferencesTobita, M., H. Munekane, S. Matsuzaka, M. Kato, H. Yarai, M. Murakami, S. Fujiwara, H. Nakagawa and T. Ozawa (2005): Studies on InSAR data processing techniques, Bull. GSI., 106, 37-49 (in Japanese).Fukushima, Y. and A. Hooper (2011): Crustal deformation after 2004 Niigataken-Chuetsu earthquake, central Japan, investigated by Persistent Scatterer Interferometry, J. Geod. Soc. Japan, 57, 195-214 (in Japanese with English abstract).Kobayashi, T., M. Tobita, T. Nishimura, A. Suzuki, Y. Noguchi and M. Yamanaka (2011): Crustal deformation map for the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake, detected by InSAR analysis combined with GEONET data, Earth Planets Space, 63 , 621-625, 2011.Fukushima, Y. (2013): Correction of DInSAR noise using GNSS measurements, in proceedings of APSAR 2013, 2013.