Large Scale Assessment of Radio Frequency Interference Signatures in L-band SAR Data
Abstract
Imagery of L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) systems such as the PALSAR sensor on board the Advanced Land Observing Satellite (ALOS) has proven to be a valuable tool for observing environmental changes around the globe. Besides offering 24/7 operability, the L-band frequency provides improved interferometric coherence, and L-band polarimetric data has shown great potential for vegetation monitoring, sea ice classification, and the observation of glaciers and ice sheets. To maximize the benefit of missions such as ALOS PALSAR for environmental monitoring, data consistency and calibration are vital. Unfortunately, radio frequency interference (RFI) signatures from ground-based radar systems regularly impair L-band SAR data quality and consistency. With this study we present a large-scale analysis of typical RFI signatures that are regularly observed in L-band SAR data over the Americas. Through a study of the vast archive of L-band SAR data in the US Government Research Consortium (USGRC) data pool at the Alaska Satellite Facility (ASF) we were able to address the following research goals: 1. Assessment of RFI Signatures in L-band SAR data and their Effects on SAR Data Quality: An analysis of time-frequency properties of RFI signatures in L-band SAR data of the USGRC data pool is presented. It is shown that RFI-filtering algorithms implemented in the operational ALOS PALSAR processor are not sufficient to remove all RFI-related artifacts. In examples, the deleterious effects of RFI on SAR image quality, polarimetric signature, SAR phase, and interferometric coherence are presented. 2. Large-Scale Assessment of Severity, Spatial Distribution, and Temporal Variation of RFI Signatures in L-band SAR data: L-band SAR data in the USGRC data pool were screened for RFI using a custom algorithm. Per SAR frame, the algorithm creates geocoded frame bounding boxes that are color-coded according to RFI intensity and converted to KML files for analysis in Google Earth. From the screening results, parameters such as RFI severity and spatial distribution of RFI were derived. Through a comparison of RFI signatures in older SAR data from JAXA's Japanese Earth Resources Satellite (JERS-1) and recent ALOS PALSAR data, changes in RFI signatures in the Americas were derived, indicating a strong increase of L-band signal contamination over time. 3. An Optimized RFI Filter and its Performance in Data Restoration: An optimized RFI filter has been developed and tested at ASF. The algorithm has proven to be effective in detecting and removing RFI signatures in L-band SAR data and restoring the advertised quality of SAR imagery, polarization, and interferometric phase. The properties of the RFI filter will be described and its performance will be demonstrated in examples. The presented work is a prime example of large-scale research that is made possible by the availability of SAR data through the extensive data archive of the USGRC data pool at ASF.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2011
- Bibcode:
- 2011AGUFMIN22A..08M
- Keywords:
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- 0674 ELECTROMAGNETICS / Signal processing and adaptive antennas;
- 1294 GEODESY AND GRAVITY / Instruments and techniques;
- 1916 INFORMATICS / Data and information discovery;
- 1926 INFORMATICS / Geospatial