A three-dimensional radar backscatter model of forest canopies
three-dimensional forest backscatter model, which takes full account of spatial position of trees in a forest stand is described. A forest stand was divided into cells according to arbitrary spatial resolution. The cells may include "crown," "trunk," and "gap" component...
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Veröffentlicht in: | IEEE transactions on geoscience and remote sensing 1995-03, Vol.33 (2), p.372-382 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | three-dimensional forest backscatter model, which takes full account of spatial position of trees in a forest stand is described. A forest stand was divided into cells according to arbitrary spatial resolution. The cells may include "crown," "trunk," and "gap" components, determined by the shape, size and position of the trees. The forest floor is represented by a layer of "ground" cells. A ray tracing method was used to calculate backscattering components of 1) direct crown backscatter, 2) direct backscattering from ground, 3) direct backscattering from trunk, 4) crown-ground scattering, and 5) trunk-ground scattering. Both the attenuation and time-delay of microwave signals within cells other than "gap" were also calculated from ray tracing. The backscattering Mueller matrices of these components within the same range intervals were incoherently added to yield the total backscattering of an image pixel. By assuming a zero-mean, multiplicative Gaussian noise for image speckle, the high-resolution images were aggregated to simulate a SAR image with a given spatial resolution and number of independent samples (looks). A well-characterized 150 m x 200 m forest stand in Maine, USA, was used to parameterize the model. The simulated radar backscatter coefficients were compared with actual JPL SAR data. The model gives reasonable prediction of backscattering coefficients averaged over the entire stand with agreement between model and data within 1.35 dB for all channels. The correlations between simulated images and SAR data (10 by 15 pixels) were positive and significant at the 0.001 level for all frequencies (P, L, and C bands) and polarizations (HH, HV, and VV). |
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ISSN: | 0196-2892 1558-0644 |
DOI: | 10.1109/TGRS.1995.8746018 |