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Surface Change Detection Using Large Footprint Laser AltimetryLaser altimeters provide a precise and accurate method for mapping topography at fine horizontal and vertical scales. A laser altimeter provides range by measuring the roundtrip flight time of a short pulse of laser light from the laser altimeter instrument to the target surface. The range is then combined with laser beam pointing knowledge and absolute position knowledge to provide an absolute measurement of the surface topography. Newer generations of laser altimeters measure the range by recording the shape and time of the outgoing and received laser pulses. The shape of the return pulse can also provide unique information about the vertical structure of material such as vegetation within each laser footprint. Distortion of the return pulse is caused by the time-distributed reflections adding together and representing the vertical distribution of surfaces within the footprint. Larger footprints (10 - 100m in diameter) can support numerous target surfaces and thus provide the potential for producing complex return pulses. Interpreting the return pulse from laser altimeters has evolved from simple timing between thresholds, range-walk corrections, constant-fraction discriminators, and multi-stop time interval units to actual recording of the time varying return pulse intensity - the return waveform. Interpreting the waveform can be as simple as digitally thresholding the return pulse, calculating a centroid, to fitting one or more gaussian pulse-shapes to the signal. What we present here is a new technique for using the raw recorded return pulse as a raw observation to detect centimeter-level vertical topographic change using large footprint airborne and spaceborne laser altimetry. We use the correlation of waveforms from coincident footprints as an indication of the similarity in structure of the waveforms from epoch to epoch, and assume that low correlation is an indicator of vertical structure or elevation change. Thus, using vertically and horizontally geolocated waveforms as raw observables (i.e., waveforms tied to a common reference ellipsoid), we assess whether epoch-to-epoch vertical ground motion results in a decrease in the correlation of coincident waveforms over time, and whether this can be used to quantify the magnitude of the deformation. Results of computer models and an example over an area of eroded beachfront will be presented.
Document ID
20000116361
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Blair, J. Bryan
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD United States)
Hofton, Michelle A.
(Maryland Univ. College Park, MD United States)
Smith, David E.
Date Acquired
August 19, 2013
Publication Date
August 7, 2000
Subject Category
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Meeting Information
Meeting: Working group of European Geoscientists for the Establishment of Networks for Earth-science Research (WEGENER)
Start Date: January 1, 2000
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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