Section: New Results
Detection of objects concealed beneath forest canopies using Time-Frequency techniques
Participants : Yue Huang, Jacques Lévy-Vehel
In the scenario of hybrid environments where objects with a deterministic response are embedded in a speckle affected environment, the parameter estimation for this type of scatterers becomes a problem of mixed-spectrum estimation. To isolate and characterize these different scattering contributions, a novel method proposed by Huang et al. was used to extract isolated scatterers (IS) from their surrounding distributed environments, named IS extraction in [42]. Incorporating the Weighted Subspace Fitting (WSF) estimator, this method estimated scattering responses within one resolution cell and then distinguishes isolated scatterers from distributed ones by calculating the cross-correlation between the measured data and the estimated scattering responses. Moreover, to compare the detection performance for coherent scatterers, two statistical methods have been applied to analyse hybrid environments in [43]: GLRT (generalized likelihood ratio test)-based and SSF (weighted Signal Subspace Fitting)-based detection procedures. However, the above mentioned methods based on discrete high-resolution tomographic estimation, require to preselect the number of scattering contributions, which may induce reliability issues due to model order selection.
This paper proposes a new tomographic estimator based on Time-Frequency (TF) techniques using Multibaseline Polarimetric and Interferometric SAR data. The coherent TF analysis of polarimetric SAR has been introduced in [38], [39] for the study of anisotropic scattering behaviors and then applied in [37], [36] for dense urban environment characterization. Time-frequency techniques can represent spectral properties around specific spatial locations or spatial features at specific spectral positions, leading to describe local variations of spectral or spatial features. Considering SLC SAR images, the spectral locations can be linked to azimuth looking angle and illumination frequency in such a way:
with