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MONITORING CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE EXPOSED TO ANTHROPOGENIC AND NATURAL HAZARDS USING SATELLITE RADAR INTERFEROMETRY
Author(s) -
Antonio M. RuizArmenteros,
José Manuel Delgado Blasco,
Matúš Bakoň,
Milan Lázecký,
Miguel Marchamalo,
Francisco LamasFernández,
Ana Ruíz-Constán,
Jesús Galindo-Zaldı́var,
Carlos Sanz de Galdeano,
Sergio Martos-Rosillo,
Juraj Papčo,
Daniele Perissin,
Joaquim J. Sousa
Publication year - 2021
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.4995/cigeo2021.2021.12736
Subject(s) - remote sensing , interferometric synthetic aperture radar , synthetic aperture radar , radar , interferometry , geology , terrain , satellite , radar imaging , landslide , computer science , seismology , telecommunications , engineering , geography , cartography , astronomy , aerospace engineering , physics
Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry (InSAR) is a remote sensing technique very effective for the measure of smalldisplacements of the Earth’s surface over large areas at a very low cost as compared with conventional geodetictechniques. Advanced InSAR time series algorithms for monitoring and investigating surface displacement on Earth arebased on conventional radar interferometry. These techniques allow us to measure deformation with uncertainties of 1mm/year, interpreting time series of interferometric phases at coherent point scatterers (PS) without the need for humanor special equipment presence on the site. By applying InSAR processing techniques to a series of radar images over thesame region, it is possible to detect line-of-sight (LOS) displacements of infrastructures on the ground and therefore identifyabnormal or excessive movement indicating potential problems requiring detailed ground investigation. A major advantageof this technology is that a single radar image can cover a major area of up to 100 km by 100 km or more as, for example,Sentinel-1 C-band satellites data cover a 250 km wide swath. Therefore, all engineering infrastructures in the area, suchas dams, dikes, bridges, ports, etc. subject to terrain deformation by volcanos, landslides, subsidence due to groundwater,gas, or oil withdrawal could be monitored, reducing operating costs effectively. In this sense, the free and open accessCopernicus Sentinel-1 data with currently up to 6-days revisit time open new opportunities for a near real-time landmonitoring. In addition, the new generation of high-resolution radar imagery acquired by SAR sensors such as TerraSARX,COSMO-SkyMed, and PAZ, and the development of multi-interferogram techniques has enhanced our capabilities inrecent years in using InSAR as deformation monitoring tool. In this paper, we address the applicability of using spaceborneSAR sensors for monitoring infrastructures in geomatics engineering and present several cases studies carried out by ourgroup related to anthropogenic and natural hazards, as well as monitoring of critical infrastructures.

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