Polarimetric SAR (PolSAR) imagery offers an enhanced capability to reveal the salient scattering properties of scene content. PolSAR-based target decomposition has been widely used to show different apparent scattering mechanisms… Click to show full abstract
Polarimetric SAR (PolSAR) imagery offers an enhanced capability to reveal the salient scattering properties of scene content. PolSAR-based target decomposition has been widely used to show different apparent scattering mechanisms for various target classes, empowering a direct yet powerful technique for SAR imagery analysis. Among those common targets, modeling the random volume scattering from vegetation is one of the most important. Generally, one models vegetation as a cloud of randomly oriented thin cylinders, mainly intended for twigs and branches. At high radar frequencies, PolSAR imagery shows a strong response from leaves in the vegetation canopy. In this letter, we derive the polarimetric scattering theory for general random volume scatterers, including both thin cylinders and thin disks as limiting cases for leaf response. Adding the proposed random thin disk model explains the observed scattering difference between deciduous forest and coniferous forest, which we then incorporate into a new model-based PolSAR target decomposition scheme.
               
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