Penetration Analysis of SAR Signals in the C and L Bands for Wheat, Maize, and Grasslands

This paper assesses the potential of Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) in the C and L bands to penetrate into the canopy cover of wheat, maize and grasslands. For wheat and grasslands, the sensitivity of the C and L bands to in situ surface soil moisture (SSM) was first studied according to three level...

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Veröffentlicht in:Remote sensing (Basel, Switzerland) Switzerland), 2019-01, Vol.11 (1), p.31
Hauptverfasser: El Hajj, Mohammad, Baghdadi, Nicolas, Bazzi, Hassan, Zribi, Mehrez
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper assesses the potential of Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) in the C and L bands to penetrate into the canopy cover of wheat, maize and grasslands. For wheat and grasslands, the sensitivity of the C and L bands to in situ surface soil moisture (SSM) was first studied according to three levels of the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI < 0.4, 0.4 < NDVI < 0.7, and NDVI > 0.7). Next, the temporal evolution of the SAR signal in the C and L bands was analyzed according to SSM and the NDVI. For wheat and grasslands, the results showed that the L-band in HH polarization penetrates the canopy even when the canopy is well-developed (NDVI > 0.7), whereas the penetration of the C-band into the canopy is limited for an NDVI < 0.7. For an NDVI less than 0.7, the sensitivity of the radar signal to SSM is approximately 0.27 dB/vol.% for the L-band in HH polarization and approximately 0.12 dB/vol.% for the C-band (in both VV and VH polarizations). For highly developed wheat and grassland cover (NDVI > 0.7), the sensitivity of the L-band in HH polarization to SSM is approximately 0.19 dB/vol.%, whereas as the C-band is insensitive to SSM. For maize, only the temporal evolution of the C-band according to SSM and the NDVI was studied because the swath of SAR images in the L-band did not cover the maize plots. The results showed that the C-band in VV polarization is able to penetrate the maize canopy even when the canopy is well developed (NDVI > 0.7) due to high-order scattering along the soil-vegetation pathway that contains a soil contribution. According to results obtained in this paper, the L-band would penetrate a well-developed maize cover since the penetration depth of the L-band is greater than that of the C-band.
ISSN:2072-4292
2072-4292
DOI:10.3390/rs11010031