11 research outputs found

    Étude de la rétrodiffusion des surfaces d'eau en bande Ka à faible incidence

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    The evolution of the altimetric techniques from Ku-band to Ka-band and the wide swath al-timetry in the context of the SWOT mission (« Surface Water Ocean Topography », CNES/NASA) raises new scientific questions about the validity of the backscattering models from water sur-faces in such a frequency band and errors in estimating water heights from time-evolving water surfaces. A backscattering model (GO4) adapted to the SWOT configuration is introduced. It preserves the accuracy of the referencial Physical Optics model while maintaining the simplicity of the clas-sical Optical Geometrics model. In addition to the classical slope parameter, it introduces another parameter called as « effective curvature » (msc). This model allows the inverson of the surface slope and curvature parameters under certain conditions which are developped in this manus-cript. The joint validity of the backscattering models in Ka-band and from water surfaces is che-cked from controlled wind-wave tank radar measurements . In a last part, the temporal properties of the backscattered signal is studied, in particular the correlation time and the Doppler shift induced by waves motion. Influence of the latters on the non focused SAR synthesis is studied in the context of the SWOT system.L’évolution des techniques altimétriques de la bande Ku Nadir vers la bande Ka et l’interféro-métrie large fauchée proche Nadir dans le contexte de la mission SWOT (« Surface Water Ocean Topography », CNES/NASA) soulève de nouvelles questions scientifiques quant à la validité des modèles de rétrodiffusion des surfaces d’eau dans cette bande de fréquence et les erreurs sur les estimations de hauteurs d’eau dues aux mouvements de ces surfaces au cours du temps. Un modèle de rétrodiffusion (GO4) adapté à la configuration SWOT est présenté. Il conserve la précision du modèle de référence de l’Optique Physique tout en gardant la simplicité du modèle plus couramment employé de l’Optique Géométrique. En plus du paramètre classique de pente, il introduit un paramètre supplémentaire, dit de « courbure effective » (msc). Le modèle permet l’inversion des paramètres de pente et de courbure de la surface sous certaines conditions déve-loppées dans ce manuscrit. La validité des modèles conjoints de rétrodiffusion en bande Ka et de surface d’eau a été vérifiée sur des mesures radar effectuées en soufflerie dans un environnement contrôlé. Dans une dernière partie, les propriétés temporelles du signal rétrodiffusé ont été étudiées, en particulier le temps de corrélation et le décalage Doppler induit par le mouvement des vagues. Nous étudions l’influence de ces quantités sur les performances de la synthèse SAR non focalisée du système SWOT

    Study of the backscattering from water surfaces in Ka-Band at low incidence

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    L’évolution des techniques altimétriques de la bande Ku Nadir vers la bande Ka et l’interféro-métrie large fauchée proche Nadir dans le contexte de la mission SWOT (« Surface Water Ocean Topography », CNES/NASA) soulève de nouvelles questions scientifiques quant à la validité des modèles de rétrodiffusion des surfaces d’eau dans cette bande de fréquence et les erreurs sur les estimations de hauteurs d’eau dues aux mouvements de ces surfaces au cours du temps. Un modèle de rétrodiffusion (GO4) adapté à la configuration SWOT est présenté. Il conserve la précision du modèle de référence de l’Optique Physique tout en gardant la simplicité du modèle plus couramment employé de l’Optique Géométrique. En plus du paramètre classique de pente, il introduit un paramètre supplémentaire, dit de « courbure effective » (msc). Le modèle permet l’inversion des paramètres de pente et de courbure de la surface sous certaines conditions déve-loppées dans ce manuscrit. La validité des modèles conjoints de rétrodiffusion en bande Ka et de surface d’eau a été vérifiée sur des mesures radar effectuées en soufflerie dans un environnement contrôlé. Dans une dernière partie, les propriétés temporelles du signal rétrodiffusé ont été étudiées, en particulier le temps de corrélation et le décalage Doppler induit par le mouvement des vagues. Nous étudions l’influence de ces quantités sur les performances de la synthèse SAR non focalisée du système SWOT.The evolution of the altimetric techniques from Ku-band to Ka-band and the wide swath al-timetry in the context of the SWOT mission (« Surface Water Ocean Topography », CNES/NASA) raises new scientific questions about the validity of the backscattering models from water sur-faces in such a frequency band and errors in estimating water heights from time-evolving water surfaces. A backscattering model (GO4) adapted to the SWOT configuration is introduced. It preserves the accuracy of the referencial Physical Optics model while maintaining the simplicity of the clas-sical Optical Geometrics model. In addition to the classical slope parameter, it introduces another parameter called as « effective curvature » (msc). This model allows the inverson of the surface slope and curvature parameters under certain conditions which are developped in this manus-cript. The joint validity of the backscattering models in Ka-band and from water surfaces is che-cked from controlled wind-wave tank radar measurements . In a last part, the temporal properties of the backscattered signal is studied, in particular the correlation time and the Doppler shift induced by waves motion. Influence of the latters on the non focused SAR synthesis is studied in the context of the SWOT system

    Marine Oil Slicks Quantification From L-band Dual-Polarization SAR Imagery

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    International audienceWe show, using simple physical models, that a quantitative estimation of the volume fraction of marine oil slicks can be achieved from dual-polarization synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery. Volume fraction, which quantifies the proportion of seawater in oil in the case of a mixture, depends primarily on volume scattering mechanisms and is inferred from the polarization ratio in the L-band. A quantification algorithm is derived, namely, the volume fraction estimation algorithm that is applied to two experimental data sets acquired in the Mediterranean Sea during the POLLUPROOF’2015 exercise and in the North Sea during the NOFO’2015 experiment using the Office National d’Études et de Recherches Aérospatiales airborne L-band SETHI system. The resulting volume fraction maps of the quantification method are presented and discussed, opening new perspectives for marine oil slicks monitoring by means of dual-polarization SAR imagery

    Dual-Polarized L-Band SAR Imagery for Temporal Monitoring of Marine Oil Slick Concentration

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    International audienceSAR sensors are usually used in the offshore domain to detect marine oil slicks which allows the authorities to guide cleanup operations or prosecute polluters. As radar imagery can be used any time of day or year and in almost any weather conditions, the use and programming of such remote sensing data is usually favored over optical imagery. Nevertheless, images collected in the optical domain provide access to key information not accessible today by SAR instruments, such as the thickness or the amount of pollutant. To address this knowledge gap, a methodology based on the joint use of a scattering model (U-WCA) and remote sensing data collected by a low frequency (e.g., L-band) imaging radar over controlled release of mineral oil spill is reported in this paper. The proposed method allows estimation of the concentration of pollutant within an oil-in-water mixture as well as the temporal variation of this quantity due to weathering processes

    Marine Oil Slicks Quantification From L-band Dual-Polarization SAR Imagery

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    The GO4 model in near-nadir microwave scattering from the sea surface

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    Abstract-We introduce a practical and accurate model, referred to as "GO4", to describe near-nadir microwave scattering from the sea surface and at the same time we address the issue of the filtered mean square slope (mss) conventionally used in the Geometrical Optics model. GO4 is a simple correction of this last model taking into account the diffraction correction induced by the rough surface through what we call an effective mean square curvature (msc). We evaluate the effective msc as a function of the surface wavenumber spectrum and the radar frequency and show that GO4 reaches the same accuracy as the Physical Optics model in a wide range of incidence and frequency bands with the sole knowledge of the mss and msc parameters. The key point is that the mss entering in GO4 is not the filtered but the total slope. We provide estimation of the effective msc on the basis of classical sea spectrum models. We also evaluate the effective msc from near-nadir satellite data in various bands and show that it is consistent with model predictions. Non-Gaussian effects are discussed and shown to be incorporated in the effective msc. We give some applications of the method, namely the estimation of the total sea surface mss and the recalibration of relative radar cross-sections

    The GO4 Model in Near-Nadir Microwave Scattering From the Sea Surface

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    We introduce a practical and accurate model, referred to as "GO4," to describe near-nadir microwave scattering from the sea surface, and at the same time, we address the issue of the filtered mean square slope (mss) conventionally used in the geometrical optics model. GO4 is a simple correction of this last model, taking into account the diffraction correction induced by the rough surface through what we call an effective mean square curvature (msc). We evaluate the effective msc as a function of the surface wavenumber spectrum and the radar frequency and show that GO4 reaches the same accuracy as the physical optics model in a wide range of incidence and frequency bands with the sole knowledge of the mss and msc parameters. The key point is that the mss entering in GO4 is not the filtered but the total slope. We provide estimation of the effective msc on the basis of classical sea spectrum models. We also evaluate the effective msc from near-nadir satellite data in various bands and show that it is consistent with model predictions. Non-Gaussian effects are discussed and shown to be incorporated in the effective msc. We give some applications of the method, namely, the estimation of the total sea surface mss and the recalibration of relative radar cross sections
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