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Keywords = polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (SAR)

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22 pages, 12869 KB  
Article
Lightweight Complex-Valued Siamese Network for Few-Shot PolSAR Image Classification
by Yinyin Jiang, Rongzhen Du, Wanying Song, Peng Zhang, Lei Liu and Zhenxi Zhang
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(2), 344; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18020344 - 20 Jan 2026
Abstract
Complex-valued convolutional neural networks (CVCNNs) have demonstrated strong capabilities for polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) image classification by effectively integrating both amplitude and phase information inherent in polarimetric data. However, their practical deployment faces significant challenges due to high computational costs and performance [...] Read more.
Complex-valued convolutional neural networks (CVCNNs) have demonstrated strong capabilities for polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) image classification by effectively integrating both amplitude and phase information inherent in polarimetric data. However, their practical deployment faces significant challenges due to high computational costs and performance degradation caused by extremely limited labeled samples. To address these challenges, a lightweight CV Siamese network (LCVSNet) is proposed for few-shot PolSAR image classification. Considering the constraints of limited hardware resources in practical applications, simple one-dimensional (1D) CV convolutions along the scattering dimension are combined with two-dimensional (2D) lightweight CV convolutions. In this way, the inter-element dependencies of polarimetric coherency matrix and the spatial correlations between neighboring units can be captured effectively, while simultaneously reducing computational costs. Furthermore, LCVSNet incorporates a contrastive learning (CL) projection head to explicitly optimize the feature space. This optimization can effectively enhance the feature discriminability, leading to accurate classification with a limited number of labeled samples. Experiments on three real PolSAR datasets demonstrate the effectiveness and practical utility of LCVSNet for PolSAR image classification with a small number of labeled samples. Full article
28 pages, 32251 KB  
Article
A Dual-Resolution Network Based on Orthogonal Components for Building Extraction from VHR PolSAR Images
by Songhao Ni, Fuhai Zhao, Mingjie Zheng, Zhen Chen and Xiuqing Liu
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(2), 305; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18020305 - 16 Jan 2026
Viewed by 63
Abstract
Sub-meter-resolution Polarimetric Synthetic Aperture Radar (PolSAR) imagery enables precise building footprint extraction but introduces complex scattering correlated with fine spatial structures. This change renders both traditional methods, which rely on simplified scattering models, and existing deep learning approaches, which sacrifice spatial detail through [...] Read more.
Sub-meter-resolution Polarimetric Synthetic Aperture Radar (PolSAR) imagery enables precise building footprint extraction but introduces complex scattering correlated with fine spatial structures. This change renders both traditional methods, which rely on simplified scattering models, and existing deep learning approaches, which sacrifice spatial detail through multi-looking, inadequate for high-precision extraction tasks. To address this, we propose an Orthogonal Dual-Resolution Network (ODRNet) for end-to-end, precise segmentation directly from single-look complex (SLC) data. Unlike complex-valued neural networks that suffer from high computational cost and optimization difficulties, our approach decomposes complex-valued data into its orthogonal real and imaginary components, which are then concurrently fed into a Dual-Resolution Branch (DRB) with Bilateral Information Fusion (BIF) to effectively balance the trade-off between semantic and spatial details. Crucially, we introduce an auxiliary Polarization Orientation Angle (POA) regression task to enforce physical consistency between the orthogonal branches. To tackle the challenge of diverse building scales, we designed a Multi-scale Aggregation Pyramid Pooling Module (MAPPM) to enhance contextual awareness and a Pixel-attention Fusion (PAF) module to adaptively fuse dual-branch features. Furthermore, we have constructed a VHR PolSAR building footprint segmentation dataset to support related research. Experimental results demonstrate that ODRNet achieves 64.3% IoU and 78.27% F1-score on our dataset, and 73.61% IoU with 84.8% F1-score on a large-scale SLC scene, confirming the method’s significant potential and effectiveness in high-precision building extraction directly from SLC. Full article
32 pages, 43285 KB  
Article
Polarimetric SAR Salt Crust Classification via Autoencoded and Attention-Enhanced Feature Representation
by Fabin Dong, Qiang Yin, Juan Zhang, Qunxiong Yan and Wen Hong
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(1), 164; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18010164 - 4 Jan 2026
Viewed by 282
Abstract
Qarhan Salt Lake, located in the Qaidam Basin of northwestern China, is a highland lake characterized by diverse surface features, including salt lakes, salt crusts, and saline-alkali lands. Investigating the distribution and dynamic variations of salt crusts is essential for mineral resource development [...] Read more.
Qarhan Salt Lake, located in the Qaidam Basin of northwestern China, is a highland lake characterized by diverse surface features, including salt lakes, salt crusts, and saline-alkali lands. Investigating the distribution and dynamic variations of salt crusts is essential for mineral resource development and regional ecological monitoring. To this end, the surface of the study area was categorized into several types according to micro-geomorphological characteristics. Polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR), which provides rich scattering information, is well suited for distinguishing these surface categories. To achieve more accurate classification of salt crust types, the scattering differences among various types were comparatively analyzed. Stable samples were further selected using unsupervised Wishart clustering with reference to field survey results. Besides, to address the weak inter-class separability among different salt crust types, this paper proposes a PolSAR classification method tailored for salt crust discrimination by integrating unsupervised feature learning, attention-based feature optimization, and global context modeling. In this method, convolutional autoencoder (CAE) is first employed to learn discriminative local scattering representations from original polarimetric features, enabling effective characterization of subtle scattering differences among salt crust types. Vision Transformer (ViT) is introduced to model global scattering relationships and spatial context at the image-patch level, thereby improving the overall consistency of classification results. Meanwhile, the attention mechanism is used to bridge local scattering representations and global contextual information, enabling joint optimization of key scattering features. Experiments on fully polarimetric Gaofen-3 and dual-polarimetric Sentinel-1 data show that the proposed method outperforms the best competing method by 2.34% and 1.17% in classification accuracy, respectively. In addition, using multi-temporal Sentinel-1 data, recent temporal changes in salt crust distribution are identified and analyzed. Full article
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23 pages, 12015 KB  
Article
A Compact Polarimetric CTLR Mode Calibration Method Immune to Faraday Rotation Using Two Dihedral Reflectors
by Siqi Liu, Jili Sun and Xiuqing Liu
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(1), 37; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18010037 - 23 Dec 2025
Viewed by 264
Abstract
This paper proposes a compact polarimetric CTLR mode calibration method using only two dihedral reflectors. The method leverages the property that the dihedral scattering matrix is unaffected by double-pass Faraday rotation, effectively eliminating the interference of Faraday rotation on distortion parameter estimation. By [...] Read more.
This paper proposes a compact polarimetric CTLR mode calibration method using only two dihedral reflectors. The method leverages the property that the dihedral scattering matrix is unaffected by double-pass Faraday rotation, effectively eliminating the interference of Faraday rotation on distortion parameter estimation. By selecting any two from four dihedral reflectors rotated at 0°, 22.5°, 45°, and 67.5°, the system distortion parameters can be estimated. To resolve the two-fold solution ambiguity inherent in the estimation process, two ambiguity elimination methods are proposed: Method I selects the solution with equivalent crosstalk magnitude less than 0 dB based on the prior knowledge that the transmit antenna is dominated by right-hand circular polarization; Method II employs cross-validation using different dihedral combinations with distinct product constants, applicable when the prior knowledge does not hold. Through simulation analysis, the algorithm’s sensitivity to receive crosstalk levels, signal-to-noise ratio, and polarization orientation angle shift is evaluated. The results demonstrate that to maintain residual receive imbalance amplitude within ±1 dB, phase within ±10°, and residual equivalent crosstalk below −30 dB, the system received crosstalk must be lower than −25 dB, the signal-to-noise ratio must exceed 35 dB, and polarization orientation angle shift should be controlled within ±1°. The effectiveness of the proposed algorithm is validated using fully polarimetric calibrated GaoFen-3 satellite data, achieving root mean square errors of 0.10 dB, 1.13°, and 0.42 dB for amplitude imbalance, phase imbalance, and equivalent crosstalk amplitude, respectively. Comparative analysis demonstrates that the proposed method achieves significantly higher calibration accuracy than existing approaches, with substantial improvements in parameter estimation precision. Full article
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29 pages, 36160 KB  
Article
Phenological Monitoring and Discrimination of Rice Ecosystems Using Multi-Temporal and Multi-Sensor Polarimetric SAR
by Jean Rochielle F. Mirandilla, Megumi Yamashita and Mitsunori Yoshimura
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(24), 4007; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17244007 - 11 Dec 2025
Viewed by 512
Abstract
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) has been widely applied for rice monitoring, especially in cloud-prone areas, due to its ability to penetrate clouds. However, only limited methods were developed to monitor separately irrigated rice and rainfed rice ecosystems. This study demonstrated the use of [...] Read more.
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) has been widely applied for rice monitoring, especially in cloud-prone areas, due to its ability to penetrate clouds. However, only limited methods were developed to monitor separately irrigated rice and rainfed rice ecosystems. This study demonstrated the use of multi-temporal polarimetric dual-polarization (dual-pol) SAR (Sentinel-1B and ALOS PALSAR-2) data to monitor and discriminate the irrigated and favorable rainfed rice ecosystems in the province of Iloilo, Philippines. Key polarimetric parameters derived from H–A–α and model-based dual-pol decomposition were analyzed to characterize the rice phenology of both ecosystems. Segmented regression was performed to detect breakpoints corresponding to changes in rice phenology within each ecosystem and used to identify the parameters to use for classification. Based on the results, Sentinel-1B polarimetric parameters (entropy, anisotropy, and alpha) can capture the phenological dynamics, whereas ALOS2 polarimetric parameters were more sensitive to water conditions, as reflected in span and volume scattering. Furthermore, irrigated rice exhibited more stable and predictable scattering patterns than favorable rainfed rice. Using the Random Forest classifier, various combinations of backscatter and polarimetric parameters from Sentinel-1B and ALOS2 were tested to discriminate between the two ecosystems. The highest classification accuracy (81.81% overall accuracy; Kappa = 0.6345) was achieved using the combined backscatter (S1B VH, ALOS2 HH, and HV) and polarimetric parameters from both sensors. The results demonstrated that polarimetric parameters effectively capture phenological stages and associated scattering mechanisms, with the integration of Sentinel-1B and ALOS2 data improving the discrimination of irrigated and favorable rainfed rice systems. Full article
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26 pages, 12819 KB  
Article
Multiscale Attention-Enhanced Complex-Valued Graph U-Net for PolSAR Image Classification
by Wanying Song, Qian Liu, Kuncheng Pu, Yinyin Jiang and Yan Wu
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(24), 3943; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17243943 - 5 Dec 2025
Viewed by 469
Abstract
The powerful graph convolutional network (GCN) for polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) image classification generally relies on real-valued features, ignoring the phase information and thus limiting the modeling of complex-valued (CV) polarization characteristics. To address this issue, this paper proposes a novel multiscale [...] Read more.
The powerful graph convolutional network (GCN) for polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) image classification generally relies on real-valued features, ignoring the phase information and thus limiting the modeling of complex-valued (CV) polarization characteristics. To address this issue, this paper proposes a novel multiscale attention-enhanced CV graph U-Net model, abbreviated as MAE-CV-GUNet, by embedding CV-GCN into a graph U-Net framework augmented with multiscale attention mechanisms. First, a CV-GCN is constructed based on the real-valued GCN, to effectively capture the intrinsic amplitude and phase information of the PolSAR data, along with the underlying correlations between them. This way can well lead to an improved feature representation for PolSAR images. Based on CV-GCN, a CV graph U-Net (CV-GUNet) architecture is constructed by integrating multiple CV-GCN components, aiming to extract multi-scale features and further enhance the ability to extract discriminative features in the complex domain. Then, a multiscale attention (MSA) mechanism is designed, enabling the proposed MAE-CV-GUNet to adaptively learn the importances of features at various scales, thereby dynamically fusing the multiscale information among them. The comparisons and ablation experiments on three PolSAR datasets show that MAE-CV-GUNet has excellent performance in PolSAR image classification. Full article
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40 pages, 6237 KB  
Article
Next-Generation C-Band SAR Mission: Design Concept for Earth Observation Service Continuity
by Igor Zakharov, Desmond Power, Peter McGuire, Michael Völker, Jung-Hyo Kim, Matteo Emanuelli, Joseph Chamberland, Mike Stott, Sherry Warren, Juergen Janoth, Alexander Kaptein, Michael D. Henschel and Yue Ma
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(22), 3761; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17223761 - 19 Nov 2025
Viewed by 2016
Abstract
This paper presents the findings related to the design solution options for a next-generation C-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) mission, developed to address the Harmonized User Needs (HUN) in Earth observation (EO) data as defined by several departments of the Government of Canada. [...] Read more.
This paper presents the findings related to the design solution options for a next-generation C-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) mission, developed to address the Harmonized User Needs (HUN) in Earth observation (EO) data as defined by several departments of the Government of Canada. The work analyses various mission solution options, including multi-satellite constellations, and their performance to evaluate feasibility and assess their compliance with the HUN as well as minimize the associated lifecycle costs, technical risks, implementation schedule, and programmatic challenges. This mission concept contributes to the advancement of space-based surveillance solutions aligned with Canada’s long-term strategic objectives to ensure service continuity for Earth Observation and national security applications. Systematic user needs analysis helped to reveal the importance of high-resolution (1–5 m), enhanced interferometric, polarimetric SAR interferometry (PolInSAR) and other capabilities. Two satellite constellation configurations are proposed: (1) a three-medium-satellite setup with a tandem pair, and (2) a five-large-satellite system incorporating tandem and optimal orbits. Employing High-Resolution Wide Swath (HRWS) imaging modes and full polarimetric capability. Performance simulations indicate low Noise Equivalent Sigma Zero (NESZ) with wide swath width fully addresses driving needs for sea ice and ocean monitoring, covering most of the Canadian areas of interest, with the revisit time of less than 4–6 hours. Orbit optimization ensures high revisit rates, enabling novel interferometric SAR (InSAR) capabilities with observations separated by only a few hours. This mission concept, considering two options with three medium and with five large satellites, respectively, offers a flexible, scalable, and strategically impactful solution for Earth Observation (EO) service continuity and technological leadership for Canada until 2050 and beyond. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Remote Sensing)
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26 pages, 707 KB  
Review
Application of Multispectral Imagery and Synthetic Aperture Radar Sensors for Monitoring Algal Blooms: A Review
by Vikash Kumar Mishra, Himanshu Maurya, Fred Nicolls and Amit Kumar Mishra
Phycology 2025, 5(4), 71; https://doi.org/10.3390/phycology5040071 - 2 Nov 2025
Viewed by 1002
Abstract
Water pollution is a growing concern for aquatic ecosystems worldwide, with threats like plastic waste, nutrient pollution, and oil spills harming biodiversity and impacting human health, fisheries, and local economies. Traditional methods of monitoring water quality, such as ground sampling, are often limited [...] Read more.
Water pollution is a growing concern for aquatic ecosystems worldwide, with threats like plastic waste, nutrient pollution, and oil spills harming biodiversity and impacting human health, fisheries, and local economies. Traditional methods of monitoring water quality, such as ground sampling, are often limited in how frequently and widely they can collect data. Satellite imagery is a potent tool in offering broader and more consistent coverage. This review explores how Multispectral Imagery (MSI) and Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), including polarimetric SAR (PolSAR), are utilised to monitor harmful algal blooms (HABs) and other types of aquatic pollution. It looks at recent advancements in satellite sensor technologies, highlights the value of combining different data sources (like MSI and SAR), and discusses the growing use of artificial intelligence for analysing satellite data. Real-world examples from places like Lake Erie, Vembanad Lake in India, and Korea’s coastal waters show how satellite tools such as the Geostationary Ocean Colour Imager (GOCI) and Environmental Sample Processor (ESP) are being used to track seasonal changes in water quality and support early warning systems. While satellite monitoring still faces challenges like interference from clouds or water turbidity, continued progress in sensor design, data fusion, and policy support is helping make remote sensing a key part of managing water health. Full article
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21 pages, 49278 KB  
Article
Lightweight Attention Refined and Complex-Valued BiSeNetV2 for Semantic Segmentation of Polarimetric SAR Image
by Ruiqi Xu, Shuangxi Zhang, Chenchu Dong, Shaohui Mei, Jinyi Zhang and Qiang Zhao
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(21), 3527; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17213527 - 24 Oct 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 838
Abstract
In the semantic segmentation tasks of polarimetric SAR images, deep learning has become an important end-to-end method that uses convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and other advanced network architectures to extract features and classify the target region pixel by pixel. However, applying original networks [...] Read more.
In the semantic segmentation tasks of polarimetric SAR images, deep learning has become an important end-to-end method that uses convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and other advanced network architectures to extract features and classify the target region pixel by pixel. However, applying original networks used to optical images for PolSAR image segmentation directly will result in the loss of rich phase information in PolSAR data, which leads to unsatisfactory classification results. In order to make full use of polarization information, the complex-valued BiSeNetV2 with a bilateral-segmentation structure is studied and expanded in this work. Then, considering further improving the ability to extract semantic features in the complex domain and alleviating the imbalance of polarization channel response, the complex-valued BiSeNetV2 with a lightweight attention module (LAM-CV-BiSeNetV2) is proposed for the semantic segmentation of PolSAR images. LAM-CV-BiSeNetV2 supports complex-valued operations, and a lightweight attention module (LAM) is designed and introduced at the end of the Semantic Branch to enhance the extraction of detailed features. Compared with the original BiSeNetV2, the LAM-CV-BiSeNetV2 can not only more fully extract the phase information from polarimetric SAR data, but also has stronger semantic feature extraction capabilities. The experimental results on the Flevoland and San Francisco datasets demonstrate that the proposed LAM has better and more stable performance than other commonly used attention modules, and the proposed network can always obtain better classification results than BiSeNetV2 and other known real-valued networks. Full article
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12 pages, 22225 KB  
Article
Soil Organic Carbon Mapping Using Multi-Frequency SAR Data and Machine Learning Algorithms
by Pavan Kumar Bellam, Murali Krishna Gumma, Narayanarao Bhogapurapu and Venkata Reddy Keesara
Land 2025, 14(11), 2105; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112105 - 23 Oct 2025
Viewed by 750
Abstract
Soil organic carbon (SOC) is a critical component of soil health, influencing soil structure, soil water retention capacity, and nutrient cycling while playing a key role in the global carbon cycle. Accurate SOC estimation over croplands is essential for sustainable land management and [...] Read more.
Soil organic carbon (SOC) is a critical component of soil health, influencing soil structure, soil water retention capacity, and nutrient cycling while playing a key role in the global carbon cycle. Accurate SOC estimation over croplands is essential for sustainable land management and climate change mitigation. This study explores a novel approach to SOC estimation using multi-frequency synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data, specifically Sentinel-1 and ALOS-2/PALSAR-2 imagery, combined with advanced machine learning techniques for cropland SOC estimation. Diverse agricultural practices, with major crop types such as rice (Oryza sativa), finger millet (Eleusine coracana), Niger (Guizotia abyssinica), maize (Zea mays), and vegetable cultivation, characterize the study region. By integrating C-band (Sentinel-1) and L-band (ALOS-2/PALSAR-2) SAR data with key polarimetric features such as the C2 matrix, entropy, and degree of polarization, this study enhances SOC estimation. These parameters help distinguish variations in soil moisture, texture, and mineral composition, reducing their confounding effects on SOC estimation. An ensemble model incorporating Random Forest (RF) and neural networks (NNs) was developed to capture the complex relationships between SAR data and SOC. The NN component effectively models complex non-linear relationships, while the RF model helps prevent overfitting. The proposed model achieved a correlation coefficient (r) of 0.64 and a root mean square error (RMSE) of 0.18, demonstrating its predictive capability. In summary, our results offer an efficient approach for enhanced SOC mapping in diverse agricultural landscapes, with ongoing work targeting challenges in data availability to facilitate large-scale SOC mapping. Full article
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23 pages, 11346 KB  
Article
Polarmetric Consistency Assessment and Calibration Method for Quad-Polarized ScanSAR Based on Cross-Beam Data
by Di Yin, Jitong Duan, Jili Sun, Liangbo Zhao, Xiaochen Wang, Songtao Shangguan, Lihua Zhong and Wen Hong
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(20), 3420; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17203420 - 13 Oct 2025
Viewed by 512
Abstract
The range-dependence on polarization distortion of spaceborne polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (SAR) affects the accuracy of wide-swath polarization applications, such as environmental monitoring, sea ice classification and ocean wave inversion. Traditional calibration methods, assessing the distortion mainly based on ground experiments, suffer from [...] Read more.
The range-dependence on polarization distortion of spaceborne polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (SAR) affects the accuracy of wide-swath polarization applications, such as environmental monitoring, sea ice classification and ocean wave inversion. Traditional calibration methods, assessing the distortion mainly based on ground experiments, suffer from tedious active calibrator deployment work, which are time-consuming and cost-intensive. This paper proposes a novel polarimetric assessment and calibration method for the quad-polarized wide-swath ScanSAR imaging mode. Firstly, by using distributed target data that satisfy the system reciprocity requirement, we assess the polarization distortion matrices for a single beam in the mode. Secondly, we transfer the matrix results from one beam to another by analyzing data from the overlapping region between beams. Thirdly, we calibrate the quad-polarized data and achieve an overall assessment and calibration results. Compared to traditional calibration methods, the presented method focuses on using cross-beam (overlapping area) data to reduce the dependence on active calibrators and avoid conducting calibration work beam-by-beam. The assessment and calibration experiment is conducted on Gaofen-3 quad-polarized ScanSAR experiment mode data. The calibrated images and polarization decomposition results are compared with those from well-calibrated quad-polarized Stripmap mode data located in the same region. The results of the comparison revealed the effectiveness and accuracy of the proposed method. Full article
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18 pages, 31572 KB  
Article
Polarimetric Time-Series InSAR for Surface Deformation Monitoring in Mining Area Using Dual-Polarization Data
by Xingjun Ju, Sihua Gao and Yongfeng Li
Sensors 2025, 25(19), 5968; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25195968 - 25 Sep 2025
Viewed by 877
Abstract
Timely and reliable surface deformation monitoring is critical for hazard prevention and resource management in mining areas. However, traditional Time-Series Interferometric (TSI) Synthetic Aperture Radar techniques often suffer from low coherent point density in mining environments, limiting their effectiveness. To overcome this limitation, [...] Read more.
Timely and reliable surface deformation monitoring is critical for hazard prevention and resource management in mining areas. However, traditional Time-Series Interferometric (TSI) Synthetic Aperture Radar techniques often suffer from low coherent point density in mining environments, limiting their effectiveness. To overcome this limitation, we propose an adaptive Polarimetric TSI (PolTSI) method that exploits dual-polarization Sentinel-1 data to achieve more reliable deformation monitoring in complex mining terrains. The method employs a dual-strategy optimization: amplitude dispersion–based optimization for Permanent Scatterer (PS) pixels and minimum mean square error (MMSE)-based polarimetric filtering followed by coherence maximization for Distributed Scatterer (DS) pixels. Experimental results from an open-pit mining area demonstrate that the proposed approach significantly improves phase quality and spatial coverage. In particular, the number of coherent monitoring points increased from 31,183 with conventional TSI to 465,328 using the proposed approach, corresponding to a 1392% improvement. This substantial enhancement confirms the method’s robustness in extracting deformation signals from low-coherence, heterogeneous mining surfaces. As one of the few studies to apply Polarimetric InSAR (Pol-InSAR) in active mining regions, our work demonstrates the underexplored potential of dual-pol SAR data for improving both the spatial density and reliability of time-series deformation mapping. The results provide a solid technical foundation for large-scale, high-precision surface monitoring in complex mining environments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of SAR and Remote Sensing Technology in Earth Observation)
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24 pages, 8351 KB  
Article
The Information Consistency Between Full- and Improved Dual-Polarimetric Mode SAR for Multiscenario Oil Spill Detection
by Guannan Li, Gaohuan Lv, Tong Wang, Xiang Wang and Fen Zhao
Sensors 2025, 25(17), 5551; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25175551 - 5 Sep 2025
Viewed by 1242
Abstract
Detecting marine oil spills is vital for protecting the marine environment, ensuring maritime traffic safety, supporting marine development, and enabling effective emergency response. The dual-polarimetric (DP) synthetic aperture radar (SAR) system represents an evolution from single to full polarization (FP), which has become [...] Read more.
Detecting marine oil spills is vital for protecting the marine environment, ensuring maritime traffic safety, supporting marine development, and enabling effective emergency response. The dual-polarimetric (DP) synthetic aperture radar (SAR) system represents an evolution from single to full polarization (FP), which has become an essential tool for oil spill detection with the growing availability of open-source and shared datasets. Recent research has focused on enhancing DP information structures to better exploit this data. This study introduces improved DP models’ structure with modified the scattering vector coefficients to ensure consistency with the corresponding components of the FP system, enabling comprehensive comparison and analysis with traditional DP structure, includes theoretical and quantitative evaluations of simulated data from FP system, as well as validation using real DP scenarios. The results showed the following: (1) The polarimetric entropy HL obtained through the improved DP scattering matrix CL can achieve higher information consistency results closely aligns with FP system and better performance, compared to the typical two DP scattering structures. (2) For multiple polarimetric features from DP scattering matrix (both traditional feature and combination feature), the improved DP scattering matrix CL can be used for oil spill extraction effectively with prominent results. (3) For oil spill extraction, the polarimetric features-based CL tend to have relatively high contribution, especially the H_A feature combination, leading to substantial gains in improved classification performance. This approach not only enriches the structural information of the DP system under VV–VH mode but also improves oil spill identification by integrating multi-structured DP features. Furthermore, it offers a practical alternative when FP data are unavailable. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Sensing)
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20 pages, 453 KB  
Article
Towards Comprehensive Characterization of GaoFen-3: Polarimetric Radar Performance and Data Quality Assessment
by Weibin Liang, Lihong Kang and Shijie Ren
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(17), 3016; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17173016 - 30 Aug 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 821
Abstract
Although synthetic aperture radar (SAR) performance and polarimetric data quality are closely related, they represent fundamentally different concepts. This paper delineates their distinctions, investigates their interdependence, and introduces a comprehensive set of technical metrics for evaluating radar system performance and assessing polarimetric data [...] Read more.
Although synthetic aperture radar (SAR) performance and polarimetric data quality are closely related, they represent fundamentally different concepts. This paper delineates their distinctions, investigates their interdependence, and introduces a comprehensive set of technical metrics for evaluating radar system performance and assessing polarimetric data quality. Specifically, radar performance is quantified by seven independent parameters, whereas data quality is characterized by a three-component channel imbalance vector and a twelve-element channel crosstalk matrix. The paper details the measurement methods for these parameters and outlines the associated technical requirements, including calibrator specifications and test-site conditions. To improve operational applicability, an approximate method for data quality assessment is proposed, and its associated errors are analyzed. Special attention is given to the γ factor, which is highlighted as a critical and irreplaceable indicator of radar performance. Using field data from the GaoFen-3 (GF-3) satellite, the proposed metrics are applied to evaluate both radar performance and data quality. The results provide insights into the polarimetric characteristics of the system and offer practical guidance for the calibration and application of GF-3 polarimetric SAR data. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cutting-Edge PolSAR Imaging Applications and Techniques)
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23 pages, 6168 KB  
Article
Assessing Burned Area Detection in Indonesia Using the Stacking Ensemble Neural Network (SENN): A Comparative Analysis of C- and L-Band Performance
by Dodi Sudiana, Anugrah Indah Lestari, Mia Rizkinia, Indra Riyanto, Yenni Vetrita, Athar Abdurrahman Bayanuddin, Fanny Aditya Putri, Tatik Kartika, Argo Galih Suhadha, Atriyon Julzarika, Shinichi Sobue, Anton Satria Prabuwono and Josaphat Tetuko Sri Sumantyo
Computers 2025, 14(8), 337; https://doi.org/10.3390/computers14080337 - 18 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1673
Abstract
Burned area detection plays a critical role in assessing the impact of forest and land fires, particularly in Indonesia, where both peatland and non-peatland areas are increasingly affected. Optical remote sensing has been widely used for this task, but its effectiveness is limited [...] Read more.
Burned area detection plays a critical role in assessing the impact of forest and land fires, particularly in Indonesia, where both peatland and non-peatland areas are increasingly affected. Optical remote sensing has been widely used for this task, but its effectiveness is limited by persistent cloud cover in tropical regions. A Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) offers a cloud-independent alternative for burned area mapping. This study investigates the performance of a Stacking Ensemble Neural Network (SENN) model using polarimetric features derived from both C-band (Sentinel 1) and L-band (Advanced Land Observing Satellite—Phased Array L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (ALOS-2/PALSAR-2)) data. The analysis covers three representative sites in Indonesia: peatland areas in (1) Rokan Hilir, (2) Merauke, and non-peatland areas in (3) Bima and Dompu. Validation is conducted using high-resolution PlanetScope imagery(Planet Labs PBC—San Francisco, California, United States). The results show that the SENN model consistently outperforms conventional artificial neural network (ANN) approaches across most evaluation metrics. L-band SAR data yields a superior performance to the C-band, particularly in peatland areas, with overall accuracy reaching 93–96% and precision between 92 and 100%. The method achieves 76% accuracy and 89% recall in non-peatland regions. Performance is lower in dry, hilly savanna landscapes. These findings demonstrate the effectiveness of the SENN, especially with L-band SAR, in improving burned area detection across diverse land types, supporting more reliable fire monitoring efforts in Indonesia. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Image Processing and Computer Vision (2nd Edition))
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