Long wavelength radar for geological analysis in vegetated terrainIn contrast to shorter wavelength radars, the range of returns from vegetated surfaces is appreciably less at L-band frequencies. However, the evaluation of differences in image quality due to changes in operational frequency is hindered by several system dissimilarities. In particular, a comparison of the Ka, X- and L-band radar imagery is difficult because of differences in 'effective' resolution. Though the physical resolution of these systems may be somewhat comparable, the inherent averaging of the real aperture systems (X-and Ka-) provides an apparent wider range of gray tones. This effect is related to the fact that at a scale where the resolution cell is discernable, the coherent scintillation of 'speckle' of the synthetic aperture L-band system masks tonal variations. This mismatch of effective resolution impedes detection of small changes in gray tone and makes subtle boundary changes less distinct.
Document ID
19800036088
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Macdonald, H. C. (Arkansas Univ. Fayetteville, AR, United States)
Waite, W. P. (Arkansas Univ. Fayetteville, AR, United States)
Tolman, D. N. (Arkansas Univ. Fayetteville, AR, United States)
Borengasser, M. (Arkansas, University Fayetteville, Ark., United States)