Z. Q. Lu
Science Applications International Corporation
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Featured researches published by Z. Q. Lu.
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2008
Z. Q. Lu; Oh-Ig Kwoun
Detailed analysis of C-band European Remote Sensing 1 and 2 (ERS-1/ERS-2) and Radarsat-1 interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) imagery was conducted to study water-level changes of coastal wetlands of southeastern Louisiana. Radar backscattering and InSAR coherence suggest that the dominant radar backscattering mechanism for swamp forest and saline marsh is double-bounce backscattering, implying that InSAR images can be used to estimate water-level changes with unprecedented spatial details. On the one hand, InSAR images suggest that water-level changes over the study site can be dynamic and spatially heterogeneous and cannot be represented by readings from sparsely distributed gauge stations. On the other hand, InSAR phase measurements are disconnected by structures and other barriers and require absolute water-level measurements from gauge stations or other sources to convert InSAR phase values to absolute water-level changes.
Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing | 2009
Oh-Ig Kwoun; Z. Q. Lu
Using multi-temporal European Remote-sensing Satellites (ERS-1/-2) and Canadian Radar Satellite (RADARSAT-1) synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data over the Louisiana coastal zone, we characterize seasonal variations of radar backscattering according to vegetation type. Our main findings are as follows. First, ERS-1/-2 and RADARSAT-1 require careful radiometric calibration to perform multi-temporal backscattering analysis for wetland mapping. We use SAR backscattering signals from cities for the relative calibration. Second, using seasonally averaged backscattering coefficients from ERS-1/-2 and RADARSAT-1, we can differentiate most forests (bottomland and swamp forests) and marshes (freshwater, intermediate, brackish, and saline marshes) in coastal wetlands. The student t-test results support the usefulness of season-averaged backscatter data for classification. Third, combining SAR backscattering coefficients and an optical-sensor-based normalized difference vegetation index can provide further insight into vegetation type and enhance the separation between forests and marshes. Our study demonstrates that SAR can provide necessary information to characterize coastal wetlands and monitor their changes.
international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2005
Sang-Hoon Hong; Choonkeun Lee; Joong-Sun Won; Oh-Ig Kwoun; Z. Q. Lu
Topographic features in coastal regions including tidal flats change more significantly than landmass, and are characterized by extremely low slopes. High precision DEMs are required to monitor dynamic changes in coastal topography. It is difficult to obtain coherent interferometric SAR pairs especially over tidal flats mainly because of variation of tidal conditions. Here we focus on i) coherence of multi-pass ERS SAR interferometric pairs and ii) DEM construction from ERS- ENVISAT pairs. Coherences of multi-pass ERS interferograms were good enough to construct DEM under favorable tidal conditions. Coherence in sand dominant area was generally higher than that in muddy surface. The coarse grained coastal areas are favorable for multi-pass interferometry. Utilization of ERS-ENVISAT interferometric pairs is taken a growing interest. We carried out investigation using a cross-interferometric pair with a normal baseline of about 1.3 km, a 30 minutes temporal separation and the height sensitivity of about 6 meters. Preliminary results of ERS-ENVISAT interferometry were not successful due to baseline and unfavorable scattering conditions.
international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2004
Oh-Ig Kwoun; Z. Q. Lu
The deformation of Aniakchak volcano is investigated using 19 ERS-1/2 interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) data from 1992 through 2002. InSAR images from the different time intervals, reveal that the 10-km-wide caldera has been subsiding during the time of investigation. The pattern of subsidence does not following the pyroclastic flows from the last eruption of the caldera in 1931. The maximum subsidence is near the center of the caldera, with a rate of up to 13 mm/yr. Deformation outside the caldera is insignificant. Least squares inversion of the multitemporal deformation maps indicates that the subsidence rate has been relatively constant. Field observations have identified numerous fumaroles inside the caldera. In 1973, temperatures of 80/spl deg/ C were measured at a depth of 15 cm in loose volcanic rubble adjacent to the small cinder cone (about 1.5 km northeast of the vent of the 1931 eruption), whereas springs near a caldera lake had a temperature of 25/spl deg/ C in July 1993, Therefore, we suggest the observed subsidence at Aniakchak caldera is most likely caused by the reduction of pore fluid pressure of a hydrothermal system located a few kilometers beneath the caldera.
Archive | 2005
Russell Rykhus; Z. Q. Lu; Mike Crane; Oh-Ig Kwoun; Charles Wells; C. M. Swarzenski
Archive | 2005
Michael P. Poland; Michael Lisowski; Daniel Dzurisin; Richard G. LaHusen; Z. Q. Lu; Katie Hafner
Archive | 2009
Jennifer Foster; Tiziana Cherubini; D. V. Manjunath; Morgan Daniel Murphy; Benjamin A. Brooks; Steven Businger; Steven C. Albers; Z. Q. Lu; Michael P. Poland; Shu-ching Chen; Cliff Mass
Archive | 2008
C. K. Shum; Z. Q. Lu; Motomu Ibaraki; C. Read; J.-Y. Kim; Helen Elaine Lee; Jin-Chuan Duan
Archive | 2008
Helen Elaine Lee; C. K. Shum; Z. Q. Lu; Doug Alsdorf; Motomu Ibaraki; Alexander Braun; C. C. Kuo
Archive | 2008
Z. Q. Lu; Daniel Dzurisin; Russell Rykhus