 |  |  |  |  |
| |  | |  | |
 |
About Observing the Earth How does Earth Observation work?How to get Earth Observation dataIntegrating Earth Observation in your jobEarth Observation users speakEO programmes The Living PlanetGMESESA's Earth Observing missions Envisat overviewERS overviewEarth Explorers overviewSentinels overviewMSG overviewMetOp overviewProba-1 overviewThird Party Missions overview Opportunities with us Multimedia Services CalendarSubscribe
|  |  |  |  | | | Experimental radar provides 3-D forest view 1 February 2005
 | A variety of different tropical forest types in Kalimantan, Indonesia was the subject of the INDREX-II airborne radar campaign in November 2004. The aim was to gather a database for the investigation and validation of bio/geophysical parameters obtained from L- and P- band polarimetric interferometry (Pol-InSAR).
Credits: DLR |  |  |  |  |
| | | |  | The Second Indonesian Airborne Radar Experiment (INDREX-II), involved flying DLR's Experimental Synthetic Aperture Radar (E-SAR) in the Agency's Dornier-228 aircraft over eight test sites around Kalimantan on the island of Borneo.
Credits: DLR |  |  |  |  |
| | | |  | Here is shown a single-baseline Pol-InSAR forest height inversion from INDREX-II data. The left image is forest imaged in L-band HH. From this through processing is obtained a forest height map with maximum height at around 58 metres and mean height between 25 and 30 metres.
Credits: DLR |  |  |  |  |
| | | |  | Validation of the Mawas INDREX-II test site in Kalimantan was carried out based on eight transects along the 23-kilometre walking bridge. Within the transect each tree is observed. Observables included species, location, total tree height, height to first branch, and terrain height,
estimated biomass, meteorological data - rainfall, temperature; 3 gauges - and
hydrological data - water levels; 15 gauges.
Credits: DLR |  |  |  |  |
| | | | What is Pol-InSAR?
 | Radar interferometry to produce Digital Elevation Models - this one showing how a pair of images from twin ERS satellites were used to create one of the Etna volcano in Sicily, Italy. Pairs of images acquired from the same spacecraft during different orbits can also be used.
Credits: ESA |  |  |  |  |
| | | |  | | Interferogram of Mount Etna derived from ERS-1 and ERS-2 Synthetic Aperture Radar data 1-2 August 1995 |  |  |  |  |
| | | | | | | |  | SAR Polarimetry data: L-band RGB from DLR's E-SAR sensor over the Sungai Wain South test site, Indonesia. The data was acquired during the INDREX-II campaign.
Credits: ESA |  |  |  |  |
| | | |  | The INDREX-II campaign involved transporting tonnes of specialised equipment from Germany to Indonesia via India. This included the E-SAR instrument itself.
Credits: DLR |  |  |  |  |
| | | | Putting Pol-InSAR into space?
| |
|  | Related news Envisat's rainbow vision detects ground moving at pace fingernails growWidening Envisat's InSAR viewFRINGE scientists use radar vision to see the Earth movePOLinSAR: Advances in radar remote sensingRelated missions EnvisatIn depth Related links DLR
|