Scale-Dependent Surface Roughness Behavior and Its Impact on Empirical Models for Radar Backscatter

被引:39
|
作者
Campbell, Bruce A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Smithsonian Inst, Ctr Earth & Planetary Studies, Washington, DC 20013 USA
来源
关键词
Radar polarimetry; radar scattering; remote sensing; POWER-LAW SPECTRUM; SOIL-MOISTURE; COHERENT BACKSCATTER; PROFILE LENGTH; SCATTERING; PARAMETERIZATION; TOPOGRAPHY; RETRIEVAL; INVERSION; INFERENCE;
D O I
10.1109/TGRS.2009.2022752
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
One goal of radar remote sensing is the extraction of terrain statistics and surface dielectric properties from backscatter data for some range of wavelengths, incidence angles, and polarizations. This paper addresses empirical approaches used to estimate terrain properties from radar data over a wider range of roughness than permitted by analytical models. Many empirical models assume, at least implicitly, that roughness parameters like rms height or correlation length are independent of the horizontal length scale over which they are measured, in contrast to recent surveys of natural terrain, which show that self-affine, or power-law scaling, between horizontal scale and roughness statistics is very common. The rms slope at the horizontal scale of the illuminating wavelength s(lambda) is directly related to the variogram or structure function of a self-affine surface, can be readily obtained from field-measured topography, and, when used in an empirical model, avoids the need for arbitrary wavelength-dependent terms. To facilitate comparison with earlier approaches, an expression that links the rms height at some profile length with the rms (Allan) deviation at an equivalent horizontal sampling interval is obtained from numerical simulations. An empirical model for polarimetric scattering as a function of s(lambda) at 35 degrees-60 degrees incidence from smooth to rugged lava surfaces is derived and compared with earlier models for backscatter from modestly rough soil surfaces. The asymptotic behavior of polarization ratios for the lava flows suggests that the depolarization of linear-polarized illuminating signals occurs as a first-order process, likely through single scattering by rock edges or other discontinuities, rather than as the solely multiple-scattering effect predicted by some analytical models. Efforts to fully understand radar scattering from geological surfaces need to incorporate wavelength-scale roughness, perhaps through computational simulations.
引用
收藏
页码:3480 / 3488
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The influence of scale-dependent geodiversity on species distribution models in a biodiversity hotspot
    Gerstner, Beth E.
    Blair, Mary E.
    Bills, Patrick
    Cruz-Rodriguez, Cristian A.
    Zarnetske, Phoebe L.
    PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES, 2024, 382 (2269):
  • [42] Analysis of surface roughness heterogeneity and scattering behavior for radar measurements
    Zribi, Mehrez
    Baghdadi, Nicolas
    Guerin, Christine
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING, 2006, 44 (09): : 2438 - 2444
  • [43] Scale-dependent nanomechanical behavior and anisotropic friction of nanotextured silicon surfaces
    Zhang, Hanshen
    Komvopoulos, Kyriakos
    JOURNAL OF MATERIALS RESEARCH, 2009, 24 (10) : 3038 - 3043
  • [44] Surface roughness, radar backscatter, and visible and near-infrared reflectance in Death Valley, California
    Weeks, RJ
    Smith, M
    Pak, K
    Li, WH
    Gillespie, A
    Gustafson, B
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS, 1996, 101 (E10) : 23077 - 23090
  • [45] Length scale-dependent deformation behavior of nanolayered Cu/Zr micropillars
    Zhang, J. Y.
    Lei, S.
    Liu, Y.
    Niu, J. J.
    Chen, Y.
    Liu, G.
    Zhang, X.
    Sun, J.
    ACTA MATERIALIA, 2012, 60 (04) : 1610 - 1622
  • [46] The relationship between winds, surface roughness, and radar backscatter at low incidence angles from TRMM precipitation radar measurements
    Freilich, MH
    Vanhoff, BA
    JOURNAL OF ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC TECHNOLOGY, 2003, 20 (04) : 549 - 562
  • [47] Scale-dependent nanomechanical behavior and anisotropic friction of nanotextured silicon surfaces
    Hanshen Zhang
    Kyriakos Komvopoulos
    Journal of Materials Research, 2009, 24 : 3038 - 3043
  • [48] Investigation of the scale-dependent variability of radar-rainfall and rain gauge error covariance
    Seo, Bong-Chul
    Krajewski, Witold F.
    ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 2011, 34 (01) : 152 - 163
  • [49] Understanding scale-dependent soft-error behavior of scientific applications
    Kestor, Gokcen
    Peng, Ivy Bo
    Gioiosa, Roberto
    Krishnamoorthy, Sriram
    2018 18TH IEEE/ACM INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON CLUSTER, CLOUD AND GRID COMPUTING (CCGRID), 2018, : 482 - 491
  • [50] A scale-dependent blending scheme for WRFDA: impact on regional weather forecasting
    Wang, H.
    Huang, X-Y.
    Xu, D.
    Liu, J.
    GEOSCIENTIFIC MODEL DEVELOPMENT, 2014, 7 (04) : 1819 - 1828