In the last few years, several advances have been made in the use of radar images to detect, map and monitor ground deformations. DInSAR (Differential Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry) and A-DInSAR/PSI (Advanced DInSAR/Persistent Scatterers Interferometry) technologies have been successfully applied in the study of deformation phenomena induced by, for example, active tectonics, volcanic activity, ground water exploitation, mining, and landslides, both at local and regional scales. In this paper, the existing European Space Agency (ESA) archives (acquired as part of the FP7-DORIS project), which were collected by the ERS-1/2 and ENVISAT satellites operating in the microwave C-band, were analyzed and exploited to understand the dynamics of landslide and subsidence phenomena. In particular, this paper presents the results obtained as part of the FP7-DORIS project to demonstrate that the full exploitation of very long deformation time series (more than 15 years) can play a key role in understanding the dynamics of natural and human-induced hazards. © 2013 by the authors.

Exploitation of large archives of ERS and ENVISAT C-band SAR data to characterize ground deformations

Ciampalini, Andrea;
2013-01-01

Abstract

In the last few years, several advances have been made in the use of radar images to detect, map and monitor ground deformations. DInSAR (Differential Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry) and A-DInSAR/PSI (Advanced DInSAR/Persistent Scatterers Interferometry) technologies have been successfully applied in the study of deformation phenomena induced by, for example, active tectonics, volcanic activity, ground water exploitation, mining, and landslides, both at local and regional scales. In this paper, the existing European Space Agency (ESA) archives (acquired as part of the FP7-DORIS project), which were collected by the ERS-1/2 and ENVISAT satellites operating in the microwave C-band, were analyzed and exploited to understand the dynamics of landslide and subsidence phenomena. In particular, this paper presents the results obtained as part of the FP7-DORIS project to demonstrate that the full exploitation of very long deformation time series (more than 15 years) can play a key role in understanding the dynamics of natural and human-induced hazards. © 2013 by the authors.
2013
Del Ventisette, Chiara; Ciampalini, Andrea; Manunta, Michele; Calã², Fabiana; Paglia, Luca; Ardizzone, Francesca; Mondini, Alessandro Cesare; Reichenbach, Paola; Mateos, Rosa Maria; Bianchini, Silvia; Garcia, Immaculada; Fã¼si, Balã¡zs; Deã¡k, Zsuzsa Villo; Rã¡di, Kã¡roly; Graniczny, Marek; Kowalski, Zbigniew; Piatkowska, Anna; Przylucka, Maria; Retzo, Hugo; Strozzi, Tazio; Colombo, Davide; Mora, Oscar; Sã¡nchez, Francisco; Herrera, Gerardo; Moretti, Sandro; Casagli, Nicola; Guzzetti, Fausto
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/888543
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