11:00 AM - 11:15 AM
[STT35-02] Evaluation of interferometric SAR coherence in view of high frequency observation by next generation L-band SAR satellite
Keywords:Synthetic aperture radar (SAR), coherence, ALOS-2/PALSAR-2, ALOS-4/PALSAR-3, land cover, landslide
In this research, we used ALOS-2 PALSAR-2 L1.1 Single Look Complex (SLC) data in Stripmap mode with a 3 m resolution for coherence analysis. This data was observed in the Iburi and Ishikari regions of Hokkaido over a period from January 15, 2018, to April 18, 2019. These data were observed at a frequency of once every two weeks, which is identical to the anticipated observation frequency for ALOS-4, although there were exceptions during certain periods. We also used the 'JAXA High Resolution Land-Use and Land-Cover Map (JHR LULC Map)' ver. 21.11 with a 10 m resolution to investigate coherence trends according to nine types of land cover. Similarly, we examined the coherence response to landslides caused by the 2018 Eastern Iburi earthquake and snow cover. We found that coherence significantly decreases for intervals longer than 28 days compared to 14-day intervals across many land covers, including vegetated areas, indicating that high-frequency observations can reduce temporal degradation in vegetated areas and significantly improve coherence. The extent of coherence reduction varied depending on land cover and snow cover, suggesting that data from smaller intervals like 14 days can be a valuable indicator for land cover classification and surface change detection. However, coherence varied greatly depending on the pair used and the observation period, and when detecting landslides using coherence, the results varied significantly depending on the data used. By averaging multiple coherences in the time series as a pre-earthquake dataset, detection accuracy could be substantially improved. This suggests that accumulating archives over time is desirable for the effective use of coherence.