Five spaceborne X-band synthetic aperture radars (X-SARs) are nowadays operating, and several more will be launched in the coming years. These X-SAR sensors, able to image the Earth's surface at metric resolution, may provide a unique opportunity to measure rainfall over land with spatial resolution of about a few hundred meters due to the moving-target degradation effects. This work is devoted to experimentally demonstrate this X-SAR capability, which can also be exploited to correct synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery for rainfall attenuation effects. Several case studies, selected from TerraSAR-X (TSX) overpasses over Europe and the southern U. S. in 2008, are qualitatively analyzed in terms of rainfall signatures. Visual validation of these rainfall SAR signatures is carried out by using available data from ground-based weather radars. A detailed data analysis for the case study of Hurricane "Gustav" on September 2, 2008, is carried out to assess a quantitative correlation among X-SAR response and near-surface precipitation rain rate. Two simplified empirical inversion algorithms, based on statistical regression and probability matching, are developed to retrieve rain rate from TSX cross-track ground-range measurements. The TSX-retrieved rain fields are compared to those estimated from the Next Generation Weather Radar (NEXRAD) in Mobile (Alabama, U. S.), showing a root-mean-square error less than 15 mm/h and a correlation of about 0.7.
Evidence of Rainfall Signatures on X-Band Synthetic Aperture Radar Imagery Over Land / Marzano, FRANK SILVIO; Mori, Saverio; J. A., Weinman. - In: IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING. - ISSN 0196-2892. - STAMPA. - 48:2(2010), pp. 950-964. [10.1109/tgrs.2009.2034843]
Evidence of Rainfall Signatures on X-Band Synthetic Aperture Radar Imagery Over Land
MARZANO, FRANK SILVIO;MORI, SAVERIO;
2010
Abstract
Five spaceborne X-band synthetic aperture radars (X-SARs) are nowadays operating, and several more will be launched in the coming years. These X-SAR sensors, able to image the Earth's surface at metric resolution, may provide a unique opportunity to measure rainfall over land with spatial resolution of about a few hundred meters due to the moving-target degradation effects. This work is devoted to experimentally demonstrate this X-SAR capability, which can also be exploited to correct synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery for rainfall attenuation effects. Several case studies, selected from TerraSAR-X (TSX) overpasses over Europe and the southern U. S. in 2008, are qualitatively analyzed in terms of rainfall signatures. Visual validation of these rainfall SAR signatures is carried out by using available data from ground-based weather radars. A detailed data analysis for the case study of Hurricane "Gustav" on September 2, 2008, is carried out to assess a quantitative correlation among X-SAR response and near-surface precipitation rain rate. Two simplified empirical inversion algorithms, based on statistical regression and probability matching, are developed to retrieve rain rate from TSX cross-track ground-range measurements. The TSX-retrieved rain fields are compared to those estimated from the Next Generation Weather Radar (NEXRAD) in Mobile (Alabama, U. S.), showing a root-mean-square error less than 15 mm/h and a correlation of about 0.7.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.