5 research outputs found

    BIOSAR 2010 - A SAR campaign in support to the BIOMASS mission

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    The ESA funded campaign BioSAR 2010 was carried out at the forestry test site Remningstorp in southern Sweden, in support to the BIOMASS satellite mission under study. Fully polarimetric SAR data were successfully acquired at L- and P-band using ONERA's multi-frequency system SETHI. In addition with other data types gathered, e.g. LiDAR and in-situ measurements, the compiled data set will be used for analyses and comparisons with biomass estimation results obtained at the same test site in the campaign BioSAR 2007, in which DLR's E-SAR made the SAR imaging. Detection of forest changes, robustness of biomass retrieval algorithms and long-term P-band coherence will be in focus as well as cross-validations between the two SAR sensors

    Biomass Retrieval Algorithm Based on P-band BioSAR Experiments of Boreal Forest

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    A new biomass retrieval algorithm based on P-band multi-polarization backscatter has been developed and evaluated based on SAR and ground data over boreal forest. SAR data collections were conducted on three dates at a test site in southern Sweden (Remningstorp, biomass < 300 tons/ha; late winter to early summer 2007) and on a single date at a test site in northern Sweden (Krycklan, biomass < 200 tons/ha; fall 2008). The retrieval algorithm is a multiple linear regression model including the HV-polarized backscatter coefficient, the VV/HH backscatter ratio and the ground slope. Regression coefficients were determined from Krycklan data followed by algorithm evaluation using Remningstorp data. The results from the latter show that RMS errors vary in the range 29-42 tons/ha depending on date and stand type. The new algorithm is also compared with alternative algorithms and found to give significantly better performance. The developed model is a significant step towards an algorithm which gives consistent results across multiple sites and dates, i.e. when forest structure, topography and moisture conditions is expected to vary

    Comparison of L- and P-band biomass retrievals based on backscatter from the BioSAR campaign

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    With the continued threat of global warming, the need to obtain consistent and accurate measurements of the carbon stored in forests is strong. L- and P-band SAR backscatter data have shown to be sensitive to forest biomass, which in turn is coupled to the stored carbon. In this paper a biomass retrieval method is developed for L- and P-band using data from the BioSAR campaign conducted in Sweden during thespring 2007 over hemi-boreal forest. The results show that the use of L-band data gives an underestimation of biomass for stands with high biomass; while for P-band no such underestimation is seen. RMSEs are found to be 30-40% of the mean biomass for L-band and about 25% for P-band for stands with biomass ranging from 10 to 290 tons/ha

    Sensibilité des observables radars à la variabilité temporelle et à la configuration géométrique de forêts tempérées et tropicales à partir de mesure de proximité haute-résolution

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    L'augmentation importante de la population mondiale, et par conséquent de ses besoins, exerce une pression de plus en plus importante sur les surfaces forestières. L'outil le mieux adapté au suivi des forêts, à l'échelle du globe, est la télédétection. C'est dans ce contexte que se situe ce travail de thèse, qui vise à améliorer l'estimation des paramètres biophysiques des arbres à partir de données de télédétection. L'originalité de ce travail a été d'étudier cette estimation des paramètres biophysiques en menant plusieurs études de sensibilité avec une démarche expérimentale sur des données expérimentales et sur des données simulées. Tout d'abord, l'étude s'est portée sur des séries temporelles de mesures de diffusiométrie radar obtenues sur deux sites : l'un constitué d'un cèdre en zone tempérée et l'autre d'une parcelle de forêt tropicale. Puis, cette étude de sensibilité a été poursuivie en imageant, avec une résolution élevée, plusieurs parcelles aux configurations différentes à l'intérieur d'une forêt de pin. Enfin, des données optiques et radars simulées ont été fusionnés afin d'évaluer l'apport de la fusion de données optique et radar dans l'inversion des paramètres biophysiques.The significant increase of the world population, and therefore its needs, pushes increasingly high in forest areas. The best tool for monitoring forest across the globe is remote sensing. It is in this context that this thesis, which aims to improve the retrieval of biophysical parameters of trees from remote sensing data, takes place. The originality of this work was to study the estimation of biophysical parameters across multiple sensitivity studies on experimental data and simulated data. First, the study focused on the time series of radar scatterometry measurements obtained on two sites: one characterized by a cedar in the temperate zone and the other by a forest plot of rainforest. Then, the sensitivity analysis was continued by imaging with high resolution, several forest plots with different configurations within a pine forest. Finally, simulated radar and optical data were combined to evaluate the contribution of optical and radar data fusion in the inversion of biophysical parameters.RENNES1-Bibl. électronique (352382106) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Radar backscatter modelling of forests using a macroecological approach

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    This thesis provides a new explanation for the behaviour of radar backscatter of forests using vegetation structure models from the field of macroecology. The forests modelled in this work are produced using allometry-based ecological models with backscatter derived from the parameterisation of a radiative transfer model. This work is produced as a series of papers, each portraying the importance of macroecology in defining the forest radar response. Each contribution does so by incorporating structural and dynamic effects of forest growth using one of two allometric models to expose variations in backscatter as a response to vertical and horizontal forest profiles. The major findings of these studies concern the origin of backscatter saturation effects from forest SAR surveys. In each work the importance of transition from Rayleigh to Optical scattering, combined with the scaling effects of forest structure, is emphasised. These findings are administered through evidence including the transition’s emergence as the region of dominant backscatter in a vertical profile (according to a dominant canopy scattering layer), also through the existence of a two trend backscatter relationship with volume in the shape of the typical “saturation curve” (in the absence of additional attenuating factors). The importance of scattering regime change is also demonstrated through the relationships with volume, basal area and thinning. This work’s findings are reinforced by the examination of the relationships between forest height and volume, as collective values, providing evidence to suggest the non-uniqueness of volume-toheight relationships. Each of the studies refer to growing forest communities not single trees, so that unlike typical studies of radar remote sensing of forests the impact of the macroecological structural aspects are more explicit. This study emphasises the importance of the overall forest structure in producing SAR backscatter and how backscatter is not solely influenced by electrical properties of scatteres or the singular aspects of a tree but also by the collective forest parameters defining a dynamically changing forest
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