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Some thoughts on the use of InSAR data to constrain models of surface deformation: Noise structure and data downsampling
Author(s) -
Lohman Rowena B.,
Simons Mark
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.928
H-Index - 136
ISSN - 1525-2027
DOI - 10.1029/2004gc000841
Subject(s) - interferometric synthetic aperture radar , geology , covariance , geodesy , resampling , noise (video) , covariance matrix , covariance function , data processing , remote sensing , synthetic aperture radar , algorithm , computer science , statistics , mathematics , artificial intelligence , image (mathematics) , operating system
Repeat‐pass Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) provides spatially dense maps of surface deformation with potentially tens of millions of data points. Here we estimate the actual covariance structure of noise in InSAR data. We compare the results for several independent interferograms with a large ensemble of GPS observations of tropospheric delay and discuss how the common approaches used during processing of InSAR data affects the inferred covariance structure. Motivated by computational concerns associated with numerical modeling of deformation sources, we then combine the data‐covariance information with the inherent resolution of an assumed source model to develop an efficient algorithm for spatially variable data resampling (or averaging). We illustrate these technical developments with two earthquake scenarios at different ends of the earthquake magnitude spectrum. For the larger events, our goal is to invert for the coseismic fault slip distribution. For smaller events, we infer the hypocenter location and moment. We compare the results of inversions using several different resampling algorithms, and we assess the importance of using the full noise covariance matrix.

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