Stromboli Volcano observations through the Airborne X-band Interferometric SAR (AXIS) system
Abstract
Publication Date:
2022
abstract:
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) represents nowadays a well-established tool for day and night and
all-weather microwave Earth Oobservation (EO) [1]. In last decades, a number of procedures EO
techniques based on SAR data have been indeed devised developed for investigating several
natural and anthropic phenomena the monitoring of affecting our planet. Among these, SAR
Interferometry (InSAR) and Differential SAR Interferometry (DInSAR) undoubtedly represent a
powerful techniques to characterize the deformation processes associated to several natural
phenomena, such as eEarthquakes, landslides, subsidences andor volcanic unrest events [2] - [4].
In particular, such techniques can benefit of the operational flexibility offered by airborne SAR
systems, which allow us to frequently monitor fast-evolving phenomena, timely reach the region
of interest in case of emergency, and observe the same scene under arbitrary flight tracks.
In this work, we present the results relevant to multiple radar surveys carried out over the
Stromboli Island, in Italy, through the Italian Airborne X-band Interferometric SAR (AXIS) system.
The latter is based on the Frequency Modulated Continuous Wave (FMCW) technology, and is
equipped with a three-antenna single-pass interferometric layout [5].
The considered dataset has been collected during three different acquisition campaigns, carried
out from July 2019 to June 2021, and consists of radar data acquired along four flight directions
(SW-NE, NW-SE, NE-SW, SE-NW), as to describe flight circuits around the island and to illuminate
the Stromboli volcano under different points of view.
Iris type:
04.02 Abstract in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
SAR
List of contributors: