Litcius/Paper detail

The Extended Timing Annotation Dataset for Sentinel-1—Product Description and First Evaluation Results

Christoph Gisinger, Ludivine Libert, Petar Marinkovic, Lukas Krieger, Yngvar Larsen, Antonio Valentino, Helko Breit, Ulrich Balss, Steffen Suchandt, Thomas Nägler, Michael Eineder, Nuno Miranda

2022IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This paper introduces the extended timing annotation dataset (ETAD) product for Sentinel-1 (S-1) which was developed in a joint effort of German Aerospace Center (DLR) and the European Space Agency (ESA). It allows to correct range and azimuth timing of S-1 images for geophysical effects as well as for inaccuracies in synthetic aperture radar (SAR) image focusing. In combination with the precise orbit solution, these effects determine the absolute geolocation accuracy of S-1 SAR images and the relative collocation accuracy of repeat pass image stacks. ETAD contains the gridded timing corrections for the tropospheric and ionospheric path delays, the tidal-based surface displacements, and the SAR processing effects, all of which are computed for each data take using standard models from geodesy and auxiliary atmospheric data. The ETAD product helps S-1 users to significantly improve the geolocation accuracy of the S-1 SAR products to better than 0.2 m and offers a potential solution for correcting large scale interferometric phase variations. The product layout and the product generation are described schematically. The paper also reports first results for different SAR techniques: first, the improvement in geolocation accuracy down to a few centimeters by verification of accurately surveyed corner reflector positions in the range-azimuth plane; second, the well-established offset-tracking technique, that is used for systematic ice velocity monitoring of ice sheets and glaciers, where ETAD can reduce velocity biases down to sub-centimetric values; and third, the correction of atmospheric phase contributions in wide-area interferograms used for national and European ground motion services. These early results proof the added value of the ETAD corrections and that the product design is well suited to be integrated into the processing flows of established SAR applications such as absolute ranging of targets, speckle/feature tracking and interferometry.

Topics & Concepts

GeolocationSynthetic aperture radarRemote sensingComputer scienceAzimuthInterferometric synthetic aperture radarGeodesyGeologyOpticsWorld Wide WebPhysicsSynthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) Applications and TechniquesGeophysics and Gravity MeasurementsCryospheric studies and observations