Exploring event landslide mapping using Sentinel-1 SAR backscatter products

Michele Santangelo, Mauro Cardinali, Francesco Bucci, Federica Fiorucci, Alessandro Cesare Mondini, 2021, Exploring event landslide mapping using Sentinel-1 SAR backscatter products, Geomorphology (Amst.) (2021). doi_10.1016/j.geomorph.2021.108021,
URL: http://www.cnr.it/prodotto/i/458459

Landslides triggered by meteorological phenomena occur worldwide and cause extensive and severe damages to properties, and life loss. Detailed maps of event landslides can sensibly shorten emergency response time, possibly resulting in reduced death tolls. In most cases, however, optical post-event images are not always available right after the event, due to dense cloud cover. Since Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) sensors overcome the limitation of cloud cover, in this work we explore the use of C-band Sentinel-1 SAR amplitude images to map event landslides. A team of four expert photo-interpreters first defined interpretation criteria of SAR amplitude post-event images of the backscatter coefficient (??) and of the derived images of change. The same team mapped two large event landslides occurred in Villa Santa Lucia (Chile) and Tonzang (Myanmar). Maps were prepared on a total of 72 images for the Chile test case and 54 for the Myanmar test case. Images included VV (vertical transmit, vertical receive) and VH (vertical transmit, horizontal receive) polarisation, ascending and descending orbits, multilook processing, adaptive and moving window filters, post-event images and images of change. In the first case, interpreters were asked to map the event landslide on an optical post-event image before mapping on SAR images, whereas in Myanmar it was done in the end. Results were quantitatively compared to the maps prepared on post-event optical images, assumed as benchmark. Results revealed a good agreement between the SAR-derived maps and the benchmark. Locally, errors can be due to geometrical distortions, and speckling-like effects. Also polarisation plays an important role, as opposed to filtering. Despite the preliminary nature of this study, it proved that SAR amplitude derived products are suitable to prepare accurate maps of large event landslides, and that they should be further tested to prepare event inventories.

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