Alignment of Multifrequency SAR Images Acquired over Sea Ice Using Drift Compensation
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31061Date
2023-08-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
In this article, we investigate the feasibility to align
synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery based on a compensation
for sea ice drift occurring between temporally shifted image acquisitions. The image alignment is a requirement for improving
sea ice classification by combining multifrequency SAR images
acquired at different times. Images obtained at different radar
frequencies provide complementary information, thus reducing
ambiguities in the separation of ice types and the retrieval of sea
ice parameters. For the alignment we use ice displacement vectors
obtained from a sea ice drift retrieval algorithm based on pattern
matching. The displacement vectors are organized on a triangular
mesh and used for a piecewise affine transformation of the slave
image onto the master image. In our case study, we developed
an alignment framework for pairs of Advanced Land Observing
Satellite-2 PALSAR-2 (L-band) and Sentinel-1 (C-band) images.
We demonstrate several successful examples of alignment for time
gaps ranging from a few hours to several days, depending on the
ice conditions. The data were acquired over three test sites in the
Arctic: 1) Belgica Bank, 2) Fram Strait, and 3) Lincoln Sea. We
assess the quality of the alignment using the structural similarity
index. From the displacement vectors, locations and extensions of
patches of strong ice deformation are determined, which allows
to estimate the possible areal size of successful alignment over
undeformed ice and a judgment of the expected quality for each
image pair. The comprehensive assessment of hundreds of aligned
L–C SAR pairs shows the potential of our method to work under
various environmental conditions provided that the ice drift can be
estimated reliably.
Publisher
IEEECitation
Demchev, Eriksson, Hildeman, Dierking. Alignment of Multifrequency SAR Images Acquired over Sea Ice Using Drift Compensation. IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing. 2023;16:7393-7402Metadata
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