1 / 9

Active Microwave Physics and Basics

Active Microwave Physics and Basics. Simon Yueh JPL , Pasadena, CA August 14, 2014. How Deep Can the Radio Waves Penetrate. 10 to17 GHz microwave can penetrate dry snowpack with a broad range of depth (1 to 5 m). 0.01m. 0.1m. 1m. 10m.

kordell
Télécharger la présentation

Active Microwave Physics and Basics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Active Microwave Physics and Basics Simon Yueh JPL, Pasadena, CA August 14, 2014

  2. How Deep Can the Radio Waves Penetrate • 10 to17 GHz microwave can penetrate dry snowpack with a broad range of depth (1 to 5 m) 0.01m 0.1m 1m 10m • Experiment, Radio Laboratory, Helsinki University of Technology in 1987 • Theoretical simulations from bicontinuous medium/NMM3D, Xu et al, 2012

  3. Radar Sounding of SnowSurface Scattering • Surface scattering dominates at near nadir looking • Early demonstration by late Prof. Hal Boyne (CSU) • Current Status – A well-developed tool for probing the snow stratigraphy • Marsahll et al., ground-based FMCW Radar • Gogineni et al., aircraft-based Snow Radar Courtesy of Boyne • What is the resolution? • ΔR=Range resolution=C/2B • ΔH=H(1/cosθ-1) for rough interface • Beamwidth(2θ) and height (H) • Horizontal resolution=2Hθ – limited by beamwidth ΔH ΔR

  4. Off-nadir Looking RadarVolume Scattering SAR processing can achieve horizontal resolution of a few meters from space At off-nadir angles (30-50 degrees incidence angles) Volume scattering starts to dominate Surface scattering diminishes • Main parameters for snow backscatter: • Dry snow • Snow water equivalent • Grain size (d) • Density (ρ) • Soil background signal • Wet snow • Liquid water content (radar signal does not penetrate) Backscatter contributions: Volume, surface, and interaction terms. Observed backscatter coefficient σ° :

  5. One example of data and theoryMore data acquired through CLPX2, SnowScat and SnowSAR campaigns • Snow SnowSCATbackscatter time series σvv with 40∘ incidence angle against SWE. Data taken from at Sodankylä between 12/28 /2010 and 03/01/2011. Simulated radar backscatter using the DMRT/QCA for snow volume scatteringat three frequencies. All three frequencies show response to snow water equivalent for moderate and large grain size.

  6. SAR Snow TomographySide-looking radar with multiple baselines Measurements at Reynolds Creek study site, 200 meters from tower-116 manual probe depth measurements. (Marshall et al. of BSU) n Lel • Snow stratigraphy - Metamorphism and environmental factors create complex layering structures in the snow pack r dr • SAR Tomography • Tested for 3-D forest canopy mapping • Coherence and multiple baselines • Demosntrated by GB-SAR, K Morrison of Cranfield U. Height (m) • SAR Tomography will provide insight into snow and ice • Lack of comprehensive theoretical development and experimental testing for snow Slant Range (m) Polarimetrictomographic profile over a forested area using DLR’s E-SAR system at L-band [Moreira et al., IEEE GRS magazine, 2013].

  7. Recent campaigns covering main snow regimes Inuvik, Canada, Tundra Sodankylä, Finland, Taiga Churchill, Canada, Tundra Colorado, USA Alpine/Tundra/ Taiga/Prairie Innsbruck, Austria, Alpine Kuparuk, Alaska, Tundra (Near-)Coincident Ku-band and X-band scatterometers and SAR used

  8. Radar backscatter versus SWE – from Sodankylä, Finland, Taiga SnowScat measurements at 40° for two winters Backscatter versus observed SWE, Sodankylä, Finland , SnowScat measurements for winter I , for winter II  radiativetransfermodel calculation for 3 different values of grain size

  9. Radar backscatter versus SWE – from Rocky Mountain, Colorado NASA/JPL POLSCAT measurements Backscatter for VV, HH, and VH polarizations shows sensitivity to SWE for three sampling sites Yueh et al., Airborne Ku-band Polarimetric Radar Remote Sensing of Terrestrial Snow Cover, IEEE TGRS, Vol. 47, No. 10, 3347-3364, 2009.

More Related