INVESTIGADORES
EUILLADES Pablo Andres
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
X AND C-BAND SAR IMAGES APPLIED TO LANDSLIDE MONITORING IN CORVARA IN BADIA, ITALY
Autor/es:
SEPPI, SANTIAGO; EUILLADES, PABLO; PERISSIN, DANIELE; CUOZZO, GIOVANNI
Lugar:
Puerto Iguazú
Reunión:
Simposio; XVII Simposio Internacional en Percepción Remota y Sistemas de Información Geográfica; 2016
Institución organizadora:
SELPER
Resumen:
The Corvara Landslide (Italian Alps) has been active for over 10,000 years, and systematic ground GPS monitoring within the last 15 years has revealed displacement vectors of up to 50 meters for only one year. In this work the Corvara landslide is taken as case study in order to compare different spaceborne SAR images and techniques to retrieve ground deformation and to evaluate the feasibility of Inteferometry (InSAR) processing for these applications. On one side the Permanent Scatterers (PS) algorithm was used to process a set of 27 Cosmo Skymed images (X-band) in descending mode acquired over the study area. The presence of 16 artificial Corner Reflectors, designed according to Cosmo Skymed wavelength and acquisition geometry, was crucial for the implementation of this technique in a rapidly moving and poorly coherent study area. On the other side two datasets of 16 Sentinel-1A images (C-band) in ascending and descending mode were processed with the Small Baselines Subset (SBAS) algorithm, where achieving a coherent enough combination of interferometric pairs without discarding large portions of data becomes essential. Both families of algorithms are intended to generate deformation time series and to retrieve parameters such as deformation velocity, terrain height and cumulative displacement. The Corner Reflectors were also used as ground control points to validate the time series derived from the three datasets. Local environmental factors and sensor characteristics such as the monitored time period, magnitude of the measured movements, difficulties related to X and C band wavelengths and algorithms limitations are analyzed in order to understand the performance of these techniques in a mountainous landslide area like Corvara.