<P>Interferometric synthetic aperture (InSAR) has been widely applied to natural disaster monitoring. However, it has limitations due to the influence of noise sources such as atmospheric and topographic artefacts, data processing errors, etc. I...
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https://www.riss.kr/link?id=A107510045
2017
-
SCOPUS,SCIE
학술저널
1241-1257(17쪽)
0
상세조회0
다운로드다국어 초록 (Multilingual Abstract)
<P>Interferometric synthetic aperture (InSAR) has been widely applied to natural disaster monitoring. However, it has limitations due to the influence of noise sources such as atmospheric and topographic artefacts, data processing errors, etc. I...
<P>Interferometric synthetic aperture (InSAR) has been widely applied to natural disaster monitoring. However, it has limitations due to the influence of noise sources such as atmospheric and topographic artefacts, data processing errors, etc. In particular, atmospheric effect is one of the most prominent noise sources in InSAR for the monitoring of small magnitude deformations. In this paper, we proposed an efficient multitemporal InSAR (MTInSAR) approach to measure small co-seismic deformations by minimizing atmospheric anomalies. This approach was applied to investigate the 18 September 2004 earthquake over Huntoon Valley, California, using 13 ascending and 22 descending ENVISAT synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images. The results showed that the co-seismic deformation was +/- 1.5 and +/- 1.0 cm in the horizontal and vertical directions, respectively. The earthquake source parameters were estimated using an elastic dislocation source from the ascending and descending acquisitions. The root mean square errors between the observed and modelled deformations were improved by the proposed MTInSAR approach to about 3.8 and 1.8 mm from about 4.0 and 5.2 mm in the ascending and descending orbits, respectively. It means that the MTInSAR approach presented herein remarkably improved the measurement performance of a small co-seismic deformation.</P>
Groundwater level changes on Jeju Island associated with the Kumamoto and Gyeongju earthquakes