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    A new azimuth cut-off procedure to retrieve significant wave height under high wind regimes

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    2018 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS 2018), Observing, Understanding And ForecastingThe Dynamics Of Our Planet, 22-27 July 2018, Valencia, Spain.-- 3 pages, 3 figuresIn this study, the azimuth cut-off approach, which is typically adopted to estimate wind speed from Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery collected under nominal wind conditions, is discussed with respect to high wind regime cases. First, the key roles played by the pixel spacing, the size of the boxes used to partition the SAR imagery and the image texture (homogeneity) are discussed in terms of their effects on the azimuth cut-off (位c) estimation. Then, the reliability of the 位c estimation is analyzed by measuring the distance between the measured and fitted autocorrelation functions (ACFs). This analysis shows that it is of paramount importance to filter unfeasible/unreliable 位c values. To identify those values in an objective way a criterion is proposed that is based on the 蠂2 test performed over a large dataset of Sentinel-l SAR imagery. The effectiveness of the 蠂2 test is verified by correlating the accepted estimates against auxiliary significant wave height dataPeer Reviewe
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