Abstract
This paper presents a theoretical study of microwave remote sensing of vegetated surfaces. The purpose of this study is to find out if satellite bistatic radar systems can provide a performance, in terms of sensitivity to vegetation geophysical parameters, equal to or greater than the performance of monostatic systems. Up to now, no suitable bistatic data collected over land surfaces are available from satellite, so that the electromagnetic model developed at Tor Vergata University has been used to perform simulations of the scattering coefficient of corn, over a wide range of observation angles at L- and C-band. According to the electromagnetic model, the most promising configuration is the one which measures the VV or HH bistatic scattering coefficient on the plane that lies at the azimuth angle orthogonal with respect to the incidence plane. At this scattering angle, the soil contribution is minimized, and the effects of vegetation growth are highlighted. © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
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Guerriero, L., Pierdicca, N., Pulvirenti, L., & Ferrazzoli, P. (2013). Use of satellite radar bistatic measurements for crop monitoring: A simulation study on corn fields. Remote Sensing, 5(2), 864–890. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs5020864
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