Authors
Zhenhong Li, J‐P Muller, P Cross, P Albert, J Fischer, R Bennartz
Publication date
2006/1/20
Journal
International Journal of Remote Sensing
Volume
27
Issue
2
Pages
349-365
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Atmospheric water vapour is a major limitation for high precision Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) applications due to its significant impact on microwave signals. We propose a statistical criterion to test whether an independent water vapour product can reduce water vapour effects on InSAR interferograms, and assess the potential of the Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) near‐infrared water vapour products for correcting Advanced SAR (ASAR) data. Spatio‐temporal comparisons show c. 1.1 mm agreement between MERIS and GPS/radiosonde water vapour products in terms of standard deviations. One major limitation with the use of MERIS water vapour products is the frequency of cloud free conditions. Our analysis indicates that in spite of the low global cloud free conditions (∼25%), the frequency can be much higher for certain areas such as Eastern Tibet (∼38%) and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
Z Li, JP Muller, P Cross, P Albert, J Fischer, R Bennartz - International Journal of Remote Sensing, 2006