Abstract

Imaging data acquired with the Shuttle Imaging Radar (SIR-A) over the hyperarid region of Egypt/Sudan clearly show surface penetration through the sand cover. Even though absorption does occur in the sand layer, surface refraction leads to a steeper incidence angle at the sand/bedrock interface resulting in a stronger backscatter. A simple backscatter model shows that for a low-loss thin sand layer the presence of the covering layer enhances the capability to image the subsurface interface, particularly at large incidence angles and HH polarization.

Keywords

GeologyRadarRemote sensingBackscatter (email)Radar imagingBedrockRefractionGround-penetrating radarGeomorphologyOptics

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Publication Info

Year
1984
Type
article
Volume
GE-22
Issue
4
Pages
383-388
Citations
154
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C. Elachi, L. E. Roth, G. G. Schaber (1984). Spaceborne Radar Subsurface Imaging in Hyperarid Regions. IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing , GE-22 (4) , 383-388. https://doi.org/10.1109/tgrs.1984.350641

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DOI
10.1109/tgrs.1984.350641