3 resultados para multipolarization
Resumo:
O uso de dados de sensoriamento remoto óptico em projetos de monitoramento de extensas áreas de floresta tropical é limitado devido à intensa cobertura por nuvens. Os dados SAR (Synthetic Aperture Radar) podem ser uma alternativa interessante para detectar desflorestamento nas regiões de floresta tropical onde a cobertura por nuvens é permanente. Neste contexto, o objetivo deste trabalho é avaliar o potencial do dado SAR adquirido em banda L pelo sistema aerotransportado R99B da Força Aérea Brasileira (FAB) para discriminar incremento de desflorestamento na Amazônia. Para tanto, foram realizadas classificações MAXVER-ICM com dados SAR multipolarizados de uma área teste localizada na região Sudeste do Estado do Acre. As classificações realizadas com a combinação dos canais HH, HV e VV e com o par de polarizações HH+HV obtiveram boa concordância com o mapa produzido no projeto PRODES (k = 0,68, onde k é o índice Kappa), o qual foi adotado como dado de referência. Este resultado indica que o dado SAR multipolarizado em banda L possui bom potencial para discriminar incremento de desflorestamento na Amazônia.
Resumo:
This paper assesses the potential of using spaceborne X-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data for monitoring water-level changes over wetlands. Our analysis is based on three sets of TerraSAR-X (TSX) observations acquired over South Florida's Everglades wetlands during an eight-month period in 2008. The first set was acquired in single HH polarization stripmap mode over our northern study area, consisting of managed wetlands and urban environments. The second set was acquired in dual-polarization stripmap mode over the western half of the same area, consisting mostly of managed wetlands. The third set was also acquired with dual-polarization stripmap mode over our southern study area, consisting of natural flow freshand salt-water wetlands in the southern Everglades. The first data set was used for a proof-of-concept study to verify that X-band data can generate coherent interferograms in wetland areas. Interferometric processing of this data set shows a high level of coherence (> 0.35) over both wetland and urban regions, maintaining interferometric phase in all three interferograms spanning 11 days. Surprisingly, phase is maintained over some of the wetlands even for interferograms spanning 33 days. The other two data sets were used to evaluate interferometric coherence of all four polarization modes and to determine dominant scattering mechanism in each wetland environment. Our results show high coherence values (> 0.4) in all polarization modes, with highest values in HH, then VV, and lowest in HV or VH. Interferograms calculated from multipolarization data show very similar fringe patterns regardless of the polarization type, suggesting that the phase information in all polarization data reflects water-level changes in wetlands and that volume scattering may be less important than commonly believed. We also used the two multipolarization data sets to conduct the Pauli decomposition, finding a strong dependence of scattering mechanism on vegetation t- - ype. The high interferometric coherence level of all polarization data suggests that a significant part of the X-band scattered signal interacts with lower sections of the vegetation (trunks and branches), because scattering from wind-affected canopies cannot support such a high coherence level. The high spatial resolution of TSX, combined with its 11-day repeat orbit, makes this X-band sensor surprisingly suitable for wetland interferometric SAR applications.
Resumo:
The World Order is a concept in constant mutation that has lost a lot of what characterized it when it was established with the Peace of Westphalia. The conflicts also went through changes. They lost its State distinctiveness and became dispersed and chaotic due to multipolarization. These two concepts share some connections and both dissociated from their traditional definition. This paper aims to establish a connection between the contemporary World Order and the conflicts evolution. The threats to the stability of the World Order contribute to the current disorder and reflects how the conflicts distanced themselves from the clausewitzian battles. To understand how these threats impact the World Order stability and evince the conflicts evolution two cases of study were selected: the nuclear proliferation in Iran and the crisis in Ukraine. These two examples will help establishing the link between the contemporary World Disorder and the conflicts evolution.