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TOPICAL REVIEW

Synthetic aperture radar interferometry

Richard Bamler et al 1998 Inverse Problems 14 R1-R54   doi: 10.1088/0266-5611/14/4/001  Help

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Richard Bamler-+ and Philipp Hartl++
-+ German Aerospace Center (DLR), Oberpfaffenhofen, D-82234 Wessling, Germany
++ Institute of Navigation, University of Stuttgart, Geschwister-Scholl-Strasse 24D, D-70174 Stuttgart, Germany

Abstract. Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is a coherent active microwave imaging method. In remote sensing it is used for mapping the scattering properties of the Earth's surface in the respective wavelength domain. Many physical and geometric parameters of the imaged scene contribute to the grey value of a SAR image pixel. Scene inversion suffers from this high ambiguity and requires SAR data taken at different wavelength, polarization, time, incidence angle, etc.

Interferometric SAR (InSAR) exploits the phase differences of at least two complex-valued SAR images acquired from different orbit positions and/or at different times. The information derived from these interferometric data sets can be used to measure several geophysical quantities, such as topography, deformations (volcanoes, earthquakes, ice fields), glacier flows, ocean currents, vegetation properties, etc.

This paper reviews the technology and the signal theoretical aspects of InSAR. Emphasis is given to mathematical imaging models and the statistical properties of the involved quantities. Coherence is shown to be a useful concept for system description and for interferogram quality assessment. As a key step in InSAR signal processing two-dimensional phase unwrapping is discussed in detail. Several interferometric configurations are described and illustrated by real-world examples. A compilation of past, current and future InSAR systems concludes the paper.

Print publication: Issue 4 (August 1998)
Received 21 November 1997, in final form 28 February 1998

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