Evaluation of Digital Classification of Polarimetric SAR Data for Iron-Mineralized Laterites Mapping in the Amazon Region
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Study Area
3. Material and Methods
- (i)
- Entropy (H), which measures the degree of randomness or statistical disorder of the scattering process (H = 0 indicates the presence of a totally polarized signal, which implies that the scattering is controlled by a pure or localized target, whereas H = 1 implies that scattering is due to a number of well-distributed targets);
- (ii)
- Anisotropy (A), defined as a complementary parameter to entropy, which provide information on the relative importance of the second and third scattering mechanisms based on the relationship between their respective eigenvalues (λ2 and λ3). In practical terms, anisotropy may be used as a source of discrimination when H > 0.7. This is because, when entropy is low, λ2 and λ3 are affected considerably by noise, as is anisotropy [29];
- (iii)
- Mean alpha angle (ᾱ) stands for the indicator of the mean scattering mechanism. A value close to zero relates surface reflection for scattering, from a dipole ᾱ equals π/4 and reaches π/2 when the target consists in a metallic dihedral scatterer.
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Polarimetric Decomposition Method
4.1.1. Cloude-Pottier Method
4.1.2. Freeman-Durden Polarimetric Decomposition Method
4.2. Classification Methods Based on Hybrid Processes
4.2.1. Wishart-Cloude-Pottier Classification
4.2.2. Wishart-Freeman-Durden Classification
4.3. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- For both frequencies, Cloude-Pottier and Freeman-Durden decompositions help to understand the different scattering mechanisms in relation to the surface covers. However, Freeman-Durden RGB color composite using L-band presented the best result, providing insights concerning scattering mechanisms in physical properties of main mineralized laterites.
- (2)
- Results of the unsupervised classification for both datasets using the H-ᾱ plane did not show good spatial correspondence with the geological map. The inclusion of anisotropy did not improve the classification result.
- (3)
- The Wishart-H-ᾱ-A and Wishart-Freeman-Durden hybrid classifications presented low levels of performance with Kappa values lower than 0.20. Accuracy for the identification of units of economic interest ranged from 55% to 69%, albeit with high commission error values.
- (4)
- Comparing both frequencies, the performance of L-band was superior. This was probably due to the way that the landscape roughness was perceived by the sensors. Taking the Peake and Oliver criterion into account [41], the roughness scale for the discrimination of rock alteration products in the area is closer to L than to C-band.
Acknowledgments
- Conflict of InterestThe authors declare no conflict of interest.
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Parameter | Sensor | |
---|---|---|
R99B | RADARSAT-2 | |
Frequency GHz (Band) | 1.28 (L) | 5.40 (C) |
Wave length (cm) | 23.9 | 5.6 |
Polarization | HH/HV/VH/VV | HH/HV/VH/VV |
(Acquisition mode) | (Quad-Pol) | (Fine-Quad-Pol) |
Processing level | SLC * | SLC * |
Type of data (n. de looks) | Polarimetric (8) | Polarimetric (1) |
Resolution/m (rg × az.) | 6.0 × 0.5 | 5.2 × 7.6 |
Pixel spacing/cm (rg × az.) | 2.5 × 1 (slant) | 4.73 × 4.98 (slant) |
Orbit | Descending | Ascending |
Acquisition date | 15/June/2005 | 15/Nov/2008 |
Incidence angle interval | 53.37°–67.23° | 31.297°–32.987° |
Zone | Entropy, H | Alpha, ᾱ (°) | Scattering Type |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 0.9–1.0 | 55–90 | High Entropy Multiple Scattering |
2 | 0.9–1.0 | 40–45 | High Entropy Vegetation Scattering |
3 | 0.9–1.0 | 0–40 | High Entropy Surface Scattering |
4 | 0.5–0.9 | 50–90 | Medium Entropy Multiple Scattering |
5 | 0.5–0.9 | 40–50 | Medium Entropy Vegetation Scattering |
6 | 0.5–0.9 | 0–40 | Medium Entropy Surface Scattering |
7 | 0–0.5 | 47.5–90 | Low Entropy Multiple Scattering Events |
8 | 0–0.5 | 42.5–47.5 | Low Entropy Dipole Scattering |
9 | 0–0.5 | 0–42.5 | Low Entropy Surface Scattering |
Sensor | Algorithm | Global Kappa | Accuracy (%) for the Class of Economic Interest | Omission Error (%) | Commission Error (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
R99B | Wishart-H-ᾱ | 0.16 | 55 | 44 | 58 |
Wishart-H-ᾱ-A | 0.14 | 68 | 32 | 60 | |
Wishart-Freeman-Durden | 0.16 | 69 | 31 | 60 | |
RADARSAT-2 | Wishart-H-ᾱ | 0.09 | 38 | 62 | 59 |
Wishart-H-ᾱ-A | 0.08 | 42 | 58 | 60 | |
Wishart-Freeman-Durden | 0.08 | 51 | 50 | 61 |
Roughness | |||
---|---|---|---|
Smooth hrms< | Intermediate <hrms< | Rough hrms> | |
RADARSAT2 (λ = 5.6 cm, θi = 32°) | 0.264 | 0.264−1.651 | 1.651 |
R99B (λ = 23.9 cm, θi = 55°) | 1.667 | 1.667−10.417 | 10.417 |
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Da Silva, A.D.Q.; Paradella, W.R.; Freitas, C.C.; Oliveira, C.G. Evaluation of Digital Classification of Polarimetric SAR Data for Iron-Mineralized Laterites Mapping in the Amazon Region. Remote Sens. 2013, 5, 3101-3122. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs5063101
Da Silva ADQ, Paradella WR, Freitas CC, Oliveira CG. Evaluation of Digital Classification of Polarimetric SAR Data for Iron-Mineralized Laterites Mapping in the Amazon Region. Remote Sensing. 2013; 5(6):3101-3122. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs5063101
Chicago/Turabian StyleDa Silva, Arnaldo De Q., Waldir R. Paradella, Corina C. Freitas, and Cleber G. Oliveira. 2013. "Evaluation of Digital Classification of Polarimetric SAR Data for Iron-Mineralized Laterites Mapping in the Amazon Region" Remote Sensing 5, no. 6: 3101-3122. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs5063101