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Six years of land subsidence in shanghai revealed by JERS-1 SAR data

January 1, 2008

Differential interferometric synthetic aperture radar (SAR) (DInSAR) has proven to be very useful in mapping and monitoring land subsidence in many regions of the world. Shanghai, China's largest city, is one of such areas suffering from land subsidence as a result of severe withdrawal of groundwater for different usages. DInSAR application in Shanghai with the C-band European Remote Sensing 1 & 2 (ERS-1/2) SAR data has been difficult mainly due to the problem of decorrelation of InSAR pairs with temporal baselines larger than 10 months. To overcome the coherence loss of C-band InSAR data, we used eight L-band Japanese Earth Resource Satellite (JERS-1) SAR data acquired during 2 October 1992 to 15 July 1998 to study land subsidence phenomenon in Shanghai. Three of the images were used to produce two separate digital elevation models (DEMs) of the study area to remove topographic fringes from the interferograms used for subsidence mapping. Six interferograms were used to generate 2 different time series of deformation maps over Shanghai. The cumulative subsidence map generated from each of the time series is in agreement with the land subsidence measurements of Shanghai city from 1990-1998, produced from other survey methods. ?? 2007 IEEE.

Publication Year 2008
Title Six years of land subsidence in shanghai revealed by JERS-1 SAR data
DOI 10.1109/IGARSS.2007.4423246
Authors P. Damoah-Afari, X.-L. Ding, Z. Li, Z. Lu, M. Omura
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70031822
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse