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Dive into the research topics where E. Pichelli is active.

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Featured researches published by E. Pichelli.


IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing | 2015

InSAR Water Vapor Data Assimilation into Mesoscale Model MM5: Technique and Pilot Study

E. Pichelli; Rossella Ferretti; Domenico Cimini; Giulia Panegrossi; Daniele Perissin; Nazzareno Pierdicca; Fabio Rocca; Björn Rommen

In this study, a technique developed to retrieve integrated water vapor from interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) data is described, and a three-dimensional variational assimilation experiment of the retrieved precipitable water vapor into the mesoscale weather prediction model MM5 is carried out. The InSAR measurements were available in the framework of the European Space Agency (ESA) project for the “Mitigation of electromagnetic transmission errors induced by atmospheric water vapor effects” (METAWAVE), whose goal was to analyze and possibly predict the phase delay induced by atmospheric water vapor on the spaceborne radar signal. The impact of the assimilation on the model forecast is investigated in terms of temperature, water vapor, wind, and precipitation forecast. Changes in the modeled dynamics and an impact on the precipitation forecast are found. A positive effect on the forecast of the precipitation is found for structures at the model grid scale or larger (1 km), whereas a negative effect is found on convective cells at the subgrid scale that develops within 1 h time intervals. The computation of statistical indices shows that the InSAR assimilation improves the forecast of weak to moderate precipitation (<;15 mm/3 h).


international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2009

Atmospheric water vapor effects on spaceborne interferometric SAR imaging: Comparison with ground-based measurements and meteorological model simulations at different scales

Nazzareno Pierdicca; Fabio Rocca; Björn Rommen; Patrizia Basili; Stefania Bonafoni; Domenico Cimini; Piero Ciotti; Fernando Consalvi; Rossella Ferretti; Willow Foster; Frank S. Marzano; Vinia Mattioli; A. Mazzoni; Mario Montopoli; Riccardo Notarpietro; Sharmila Padmanabhan; Daniele Perissin; E. Pichelli; Steven C. Reising; Swaroop Sahoo; Giovanna Venuti

Spaceborne Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) is a well established technique useful in many land applications, such as monitoring tectonic movements and landslides or extracting digital elevation models. One of its major limitations is the atmospheric variability, and in particular the high water vapor spatial and temporal variability, which introduces an unknown delay in the signal propagation. On the other hand, these effects might be exploited, so as InSAR could become a tool for highresolution water vapor mapping. This paper describes the approach and some preliminary results achieved in the framework of an ESA funded project devoted to the mitigation of the water vapor effects in InSAR applications. Although very preliminary, the acquired experimental data and their comparison give a first idea of what can be done to gather valuable information on water vapor, which play a fundamental role in weather prediction and radio propagation studies.


international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2011

Mitigation of atmospheric delay in InSAR: The ESA Metawave project

Daniele Perissin; Fabio Rocca; Mauro Pierdicca; E. Pichelli; Domenico Cimini; Giovanna Venuti; Björn Rommen

In this work we report the main conclusions of the European Space Agency (ESA) Metawave project (Mitigation of Electromagnetic Transmission errors induced by Atmospheric Water Vapour Effects) for what concerns the Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry (InSAR) viewpoint. The Atmospheric Phase Screen (APS) estimated with the Permanent Scatterers (PS) technique in the test sites of Roma and Como has been compared with MM5 simulations, Meris Water Vapor (WV) data and GPS Zenith Wet Delays (ZWD). The experiment shows that, even though MM5, Meris and GPS data detect the similar absolute amount of WV, their accuracy is not enough to compensate the InSAR sensitivity to the WV spatial variability. In particular, Numerical Weather Prediction models look promising for correcting long WV spatial wavelengths in presence of topography; GPS measurements reveal the best performances toward short WV spatial wavelengths, while Meris data in the analyzed area show generally poor reliability.


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2011

Three-Dimensional Humidity Retrieval Using a Network of Compact Microwave Radiometers to Correct for Variations in Wet Tropospheric Path Delay in Spaceborne Interferometric SAR Imagery

Swaroop Sahoo; Steven C. Reising; Sharmila Padmanabhan; Jothiram Vivekanandan; Flavio Iturbide-Sanchez; Nazzareno Pierdicca; E. Pichelli; Domenico Cimini

Spaceborne interferometric synthetic aperture radar (SAR) (InSAR) imaging has been used for over a decade to monitor tectonic movements and landslides, as well as to improve digital elevation models. However, InSAR is affected by variations in round-trip propagation delay due to changes in ionospheric total electron content and in tropospheric humidity and temperature along the signal path. One of the largest sources of uncertainty in estimates of tropospheric path delay is the spatial and temporal variability of water vapor density, which currently limits the quality of InSAR products. This problem can be partially addressed by using a number of SAR interferograms from subsequent satellite overpasses to reduce the degradation in the images or by analyzing a long time series of interferometric phases from permanent scatterers. However, if there is a sudden deformation of the Earths surface, the detection of which is one of the principal objectives of InSAR measurements over land, the effect of water vapor variations cannot be removed, reducing the quality of the interferometric products. In those cases, high-resolution information on the atmospheric water vapor content and its variation with time can be crucial to mitigate the effect of wet-tropospheric path delay variations. This paper describes the use of a ground-based microwave radiometer network to retrieve 3-D water vapor density with fine spatial and temporal resolution, which can be used to reduce InSAR ambiguities due to changes in wet-tropospheric path delay. Retrieval results and comparisons between the integrated water vapor measured by the radiometer network and satellite data are presented.


international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2011

Synergic use of EO, NWP and ground based measurements for the mitigation of vapour artefacts in SAR interferometry

Nazzareno Pierdicca; Fabio Rocca; Patrizia Basili; Stefania Bonafoni; Giovanni Carlesimo; Domenico Cimini; Piero Ciotti; Rossella Ferretti; Frank S. Marzano; Vinia Mattioli; Mario Montopoli; Riccardo Notarpietro; Daniele Perissin; E. Pichelli; Björn Rommen; Giovanna Venuti

Spaceborne Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) is a well established technique useful in many land applications, such as tectonic movements, landslide monitoring and digital elevation model extraction. One of its major limitation is the atmospheric effect, and in particular the high water vapour spatial and temporal variability which introduces an unknown delay in the signal propagation. This paper describes the general approach and some results achieved in the framework of an ESA funded project devoted to the mapping of the water vapour with the aim to mitigate its effect in InSAR applications. Ground based (microwave radiometers, radiosoundings, GPS) and spaceborne observations (AMSR-E, MERIS, MODIS) of columnar water vapour were compared with Numerical Weather Prediction model runs in Central Italy during a 15-day experiment. A dense network of GPS receivers was deployed close to Como, in Northern Italy, to complement the operational network in order to derive Zenith Total Delay as well as Slant Delay which can support InSAR processing. A comparison with Atmospheric Phase Screens (APS) derived from a sequence of Envisat multi pass interferometric acquisitions processed using the Permanent Scatters technique on the two test sites has been also performed. The acquired experimental data and their comparison give a valuable idea of what can be done to gather information on water vapour, which, besides InSAR applications, plays a fundamental role in weather prediction and radio propagation studies. The work has been carried out in the framework of an ESA funded project, named “Mitigation of Electromagnetic Transmission errors induced by Atmospheric Water Vapour Effects” (METAWAVE). This paper presents the general approach an the various methodologies exploited in the project, together with the overall intercomparison of the results. In deep details on the comparison with the InSAR APS maps derived by the PS technique, as well as on GPS receiver processing and water vapour tomography are reported in two companion papers.


SAR Image Analysis, Modeling, and Techniques XI | 2011

Numerical weather prediction models and SAR interferometry: synergic use for meteorological and INSAR applications

Nazzareno Pierdicca; Fabio Rocca; Daniele Perissin; Rossella Ferretti; E. Pichelli; Björn Rommen; Nico Cimini

Spaceborne Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) is a well established technique useful in many land applications, such as landslide monitoring and digital elevation model extraction. One of its major limitation is the atmospheric effect, and in particular the high water vapour spatial and temporal variability which introduces an unknown delay in the signal propagation. However, the sensitivity of SAR interferometric phase to atmospheric conditions could in principle be exploited and InSAR could become in certain conditions a tool to monitor the atmosphere, as it happens with GPS receiver networks. This paper describes a novel attempt to assimilate InSAR derived information on the atmosphere, based on the Permanent Scatterer multipass technique, into a numerical weather forecast model. The methodology is summarised and the very preliminary results regarding the forecast of a precipitation event in Central Italy are analysed. The work was done in the framework of an ESA funded project devoted to the mapping of the water vapour with the aim to mitigate its effect for InSAR applications.


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences | 2013

Overview of the first HyMeX Special Observation Period over Italy: observations and model results

Rossella Ferretti; E. Pichelli; S. Gentile; I. Maiello; Domenico Cimini; Silvio Davolio; Mario Marcello Miglietta; Giulia Panegrossi; Luca Baldini; Francesco Pasi; Frank S. Marzano; A. Zinzi; Stefano Mariani; Marco Casaioli; G. Bartolini; N. Loglisci; A. Montani; C. Marsigli; Agostino Manzato; Arturo Pucillo; Massimo Enrico Ferrario; V. Colaiuda; R. Rotunno


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Evolution of surface ozone in central Italy based on observations and statistical model

Piero Di Carlo; Giovanni Pitari; E. Mancini; Sabrina Gentile; E. Pichelli; Guido Visconti


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2012

On the accuracy of integrated water vapor observations and the potential for mitigating electromagnetic path delay error in InSAR

Domenico Cimini; Nazzareno Pierdicca; E. Pichelli; Rossella Ferretti; Vinia Mattioli; Stefania Bonafoni; Mario Montopoli; Daniele Perissin


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2013

The role of urban boundary layer investigated with high-resolution models and ground-based observations in Rome area: a step towards understanding parameterization potentialities

E. Pichelli; Rossella Ferretti; Marco Cacciani; Anna Maria Siani; V. Ciardini; T. Di Iorio

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Frank S. Marzano

Sapienza University of Rome

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Mario Montopoli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Björn Rommen

European Space Research and Technology Centre

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