Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5754882 Remote Sensing of Environment 2017 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We measured precise along-track deformation from TerraSAR-X multiple-aperture InSAR.•We validated the TerraSAR-X MAI measurement performance using GPS observations.•We measured three-dimensional deformations by integrating InSAR and MAI deformations.•We determined optimal parameters of a dike model using the 3D deformations.•We compared the model parameters estimated from the InSAR and 3D measurements.

Multiple-aperture SAR interferometry (MAI) is an advanced technique that is used to retrieve actual surface motions by complementing missing components of InSAR measurements. Despite the wide use of the MAI method in the geosciences, X-band SAR has rarely been applied in MAI-based studies due to the relatively shorter decorrelation periods involved. Thus, we need to evaluate the MAI measurements from X-band SAR for the use in the geosciences. In this paper, an assessment of the MAI performance for TerraSAR-X system was carried out at the test site, Kīlauea Volcano, Hawaii, focusing on the Kamoamoa fissure eruption episode that occurred on March 6-10, 2011. The root-mean-square (RMS) errors of single MAI interferograms were 3.26 ± 1.32 cm and 2.95 ± 0.77 cm for descending and ascending datasets, respectively. Multi-stacked MAI interferograms showed reduced error levels of 1.77 and 2.04 cm for descending and ascending datasets, respectively. In addition, empirical uncertainty models of the MAI measurements were generated with respect to the interferometric coherence of single- and multi-stacked MAI measurements, and these regression models enabled us to confirm the difference between the theoretical and practical accuracies of the MAI measurements. Moreover, the MAI-based 3D model based on high accuracy 3D maps showed some possibilities of new findings and interpretations of the geologic sources.

Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Computers in Earth Sciences
Authors
, , ,