SAR Interferometry and Surface Change Detection
Report of a Workshop Held in Boulder, Colorado :
February 3-4, 1994
Timothy H. Dixon, Editor
July 1995
University of Miami
Rosenstiel School of Marine
and Atmospheric Science
Radar interferogram of a portion of the Rutford ice stream in
Antarctica, based on two ERS-1 images taken six days apart. The fringe
pattern (color cycle) is essentially a map of ice flow velocity, with
one fringe representing 28 mm of range change along the radar line of
site. From Goldstein et al. (1993)
This publication was prepared by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration.
- Introduction
- Basic Principles of SAR Interferometry
- Earthquake Studies
- Global Volcano Monitoring
- Hydrology, Ecology, Environmental Monitoring, and Global
Change
- Topography, Techtonics, and Erosion
- Glaciers and Ice Sheets
- Technology: Existing and Planned Data-Collection Systems
- Summary Recommendations
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