Interferometric radar altimeter (IRA) is a new ocean remote sensing sensor. It can be used to retrieve sea surface height (SSH) by means of cross-track interferometry. Compared with the traditional… Click to show full abstract
Interferometric radar altimeter (IRA) is a new ocean remote sensing sensor. It can be used to retrieve sea surface height (SSH) by means of cross-track interferometry. Compared with the traditional cross-track interferometric synthetic aperture radar (XT-InSAR), IRA works at very small incidence angles for higher altimetry sensitivity. In this case, multiple discontinuous surface scatterers at sea surface would be cut into the same range pixel, which leads to severe layover. This layover induced by ocean waves will reduce the correlation between the master–slave images acquired by IRA and increase random interferometric phase noise. At present, how to quantitatively analyze the impact of the ocean wave layover on the decorrelation of IRA images is still a problem that needs in-depth discussion. In this letter, theoretical analysis of the effect of ocean waves on the decorrelation of IRA images has been carried out when the ocean waves layover is considered, and the theoretical results are also compared with the airborne IRA data. It is found that the layover of ocean waves has significant influence on the decorrelation between the master–slave IRA images, especially at very low incidence angles.
               
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