Temporal Survey of Polarimetric P-Band Scattering of Tropical Forests

This paper deals with the temporal survey of the tropical forest electromagnetic scattering with a ground-based radar equipment. Installed on the top of a 55 m flux tower overlooking the Paracou forest in French Guiana, a dense primary tropical forest, the radar system uses a vertical antenna array and it is able to provide every 15 minutes P-band complex scattering matrix coefficients. The experiment has been successfully set up and it is operating since October 2011. The main goal of this campaign is to investigate the evolution of the backscattering coefficient and the temporal coherence of the tropical forest at different time scales range. Data are calibrated in relative and processed to take advantage of the largest number of independent looks. Three months of data are exploited in terms of polarimetric temporal coherence and backscattering coefficient in the rainy season and about two months in the dry period. The temporal coherence exhibits daily cycles during the consecutive dry days, whatever the period, and these cycles are perturbed by the presence of rain. Its overall time series appear clearly dependent on the period, dry or rainy, and also on the polarization. The backscattering coefficient time series exhibit also a daily cycle during consecutive dry days, very clearly in the dry period but less pronounced or absent during the rainy period. The backscattering coefficient presents an overall relatively high stability over the full period.

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