Envisat ASAR polarization experiment in Peter the Great Bay, Japan Sea: Preliminary results
Leonid M. Mitnik, Vyacheslav A. Dubina and Oleg G. Konstantinov
Abstract
A series of ASAR images
with alternating polarization was acquired over Peter the Great Bay, Japan Sea
in 2003-2005. A combination of horizontal-horizontal (HH) and
vertical-vertical (VV) polarization was used with two different mean
incidence angles q = 18.3° and 22.5°. Additionally, the same
scenes were sensed on 23 September 2004 by ERS-2 SAR with a delay of about
30 min after the ASAR acquisition. The main aim was to study the
polarimetric signatures of the sea surface caused by the oceanic dynamic
phenomena as well as by natural and anthropogenic slicks for later use for
their detection and classification. During the ASAR and SAR data acquisitions,
ground-truth measurements of the sea surface temperature, wind speed and
direction as well as polarization images of the sea surface recorded by a
polarization video system were arranged at POI Marine Stations and at several
coastal points. Wind fields were also retrieved from the SAR images using the
CMOD-4 scatterometer algorithm. As a rule, the wind speed during the satellite
observations did not exceed 7 m/s so that radar signatures of slicks,
eddies, currents, and internal waves were revealed on the SAR images. The HH
and VV radar cross-sections soHH and
soVV computed from ASAR data decreased
with q and the polarization ratio P = soVV/soHH increased. Variations of P in the area
around the slicks reached 2-4 dB which calls for further investigations. |