Title: Remote Sensing Microwave Remote Sensing
1Remote SensingMicrowave Remote Sensing
21. Passive Microwave Sensors
- Microwave emission is related to temperature and
emissivity - Microwave radiometers are sensitive to
- l 0.1mm - 30cm
- The interpretation requires knowledge of the
system, the atmosphere, and the thermal property
of the objects
32. Active Microwave Sensors - Radars
- RADAR RAdio Detection And Ranging
42. Active Microwave Sensors - Radars
- Transmitter transmits repetitive pulse of
microwave energy - Receiver receives the reflected signal through
antenna and filters and amplifies the signal
52. Active Microwave Sensors - Radars
- Antenna array transmits a narrow beam of
microwave energy - Recorder records and displays the signal as an
image
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73. Side-Looking Airborne Radar (SLAR)
- Ranging
- - distance from the antenna to the features can
be calculated by measuring the time delay between
the time when a signal is transmitted to the time
its echo is received - Detecting frequency and polarization shifts
- - by comparing the transmitted signal of known
properties to the received signal
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93. Side-Looking Airborne Radar (SLAR)
- The "all weather" capability
- - the l used by SLAR is long enough to penetrate
clouds and light rain, e.g. applications in
tropical area - - SLAR systems are independent from solar
illumination, which makes night missions possible
103. Side-Looking Airborne Radar (SLAR)
- Spatial resolution
- - spatial scale at 1100,000, between Landsat
and air photo - - spectral information different from other
sensor systems
114. Geometry of the Radar Image
- Radar shadow
- Radar layover
- Radar foreshortening
124. Geometry of the Radar Image
- Depression angle
- Far, mid, and near-range portion of a radar
image -
- Radar shadow, more severe in the far range
134. Geometry of the Radar Image
144. Geometry of the Radar Image
- Slant range distance
- - direct distance from the antenna to an object
on the ground measured by time delay - Ground range distance
- - distance of correct scaling as we would
measure on a map
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164. Geometry of the Radar Image
- Geometric errors
- - because radars collect information in slant
range distance - Radar layover
- Radar foreshortening
174. Geometry of the Radar Image
- Radar layover
- - the top of a tall object appears closer to the
antenna than its base - - the antenna receives the echo of the top
before the base - - it is more severe in the near range
18Radar Layover
19Radar Layover
204. Geometry of the Radar Image
- Radar foreshortening
- - with modest or high relief in the mid or far
range portion - - features maintain relative position but
incorrect distance causing near range slope
appear steeper and far range slope gentler -
21Radar Foreshortening
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235. Resolutions
- Slant range resolution
- Ground range resolution
- Azimuthal resolution
245. Resolutions
- Two determinant parameters pulse length and
antenna beam width - - the pulse length dictates the spatial
resolution in the direction of energy propagation
- - the width of the antenna beam determines the
resolution cell size in the flight direction
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27Range Resolutions (along track)
- Slant-range resolution (Sr) is consistent
- - equal to half the transmitted pulse length
PL/2 - Ground-range resolution (Rr) changes with
distance from the aircraft - - inversely related to the cosine of depression
angle - Rr slant range resolution/cosqd,
- qd - depression angle
28Range Resolutions
29Azimuth Resolution (cross track)
- is determined by the angular beam width b and
slant range Sr -
- - while beam width b is inversely related to
antenna length AL - Ra Sr b, b l/AL, l-pulse wavelength
- - near range portion has finer resolution than
the far range
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32Readings