ISPRS Annals of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences
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Articles | Volume X-4/W1-2022
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-annals-X-4-W1-2022-617-2023
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-annals-X-4-W1-2022-617-2023
14 Jan 2023
 | 14 Jan 2023

BUILDING RECONSTRUCTION BASED ON A SMALL NUMBER OF TRACKS USING NONPARAMETRIC SAR TOMOGRAPHIC METHODS

M. Omati, M. M. Omati, and M. H. Bastani

Keywords: Building Reconstruction, Tomographic Synthetic Aperture Radar (TomoSAR), Nonparametric Spectral Analysis techniques, Maximum Entropy method, Linear Prediction Estimator, Minimum Norm algorithm

Abstract. Nowadays, the synthetic aperture radar (SAR) tomography (TomoSAR) technique plays a notable role in the 3D reconstruction of urban buildings through several SAR acquisitions with slightly different positions. Nonparametric-based TomoSAR spectral estimation algorithms usually work well when a large number of SAR observations. In this study, with a limited number of SAR images, we have assessed the efficiency of the nonparametric spectral estimation methods, including maximum entropy (ME), singular value decomposition (SVD), linear prediction (LP), Capon, minimum norm (MN), and beamforming (BF) in the reconstruction of the third dimension of urban buildings. The experiments are conducted on both simulated and TerraSAR-X stripmap images to indicate the effectiveness of the LP proposed estimation algorithm. The analysis of the results proves that by minimizing the average output signal power over the antenna array elements, the LP spectral estimation achieves the discrimination of distinct scatterers inside an image pixel. In addition, this low computational estimator improves the sidelobe suppression and the height estimates of the scatterers in the complex multiple-scattering urban environment. Compared to SVD, maximum entropy, Capon, minimum norm, and beamforming, the height of the Eskan tower in Tehran, Iran, obtained with the LP technique, is considerably near to field-based measurement.