H
Howard A. Zebker
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 304
Citations - 30934
Howard A. Zebker is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Radar & Synthetic aperture radar. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 294 publications receiving 27462 citations. Previous affiliations of Howard A. Zebker include Harvard University & Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Persistent scatterer selection using maximum likelihood estimation
Piyush Shanker,Howard A. Zebker +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a new InSAR persistent scatterer selection method using maximum likelihood estimation to identify persistent scattering pixels, which results in a denser network of reliable phase measurements than do existing methods.
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Titan's Topography and Shape at the End of the Cassini Mission
Paul Corlies,Alexander G. Hayes,Samuel Birch,Ralph D. Lorenz,Bryan Stiles,R. L. Kirk,Valerio Poggiali,Howard A. Zebker,Luciano Iess +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented an updated topographic map of Titan, including all the available altimetry, SARtopo, and stereo-photogrammetry topographic datasets available from the mission.
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The lakes and seas of Titan
Rosaly M. C. Lopes,Karl L. Mitchell,Stephen D. Wall,Giuseppe Mitri,Michael Janssen,Steven J. Ostro,Randolph L. Kirk,Alexander Hayes,Ellen R. Stofan,Jonathan I. Lunine,Ralph D. Lorenz,Charles A. Wood,Jani Radebaugh,P. Paillou,Howard A. Zebker,Flora Paganelli +15 more
TL;DR: Titan's lakes and seas preserve a record of its climate and surface evolution as mentioned in this paper, and the volume of liquid exposed on Titan's surface is only a small fraction of the atmospheric reservoir.
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Analysis and evaluation of the NASA/JPL TOPSAR across-track interferometric SAR system
TL;DR: In this article, the accuracy of digital elevation models generated by the JPWNASA TOPSAR synthetic aperture radar interferometer instrument by acquiring topographic radar data in the summer of 1992 over the National Training Center, near Ft. Irwin, California, and comparing the measurements to a very accurate digital elevation model derived for this area by the US. Army Topographic Engineering Center (TEC).
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Regional geomorphology and history of Titan's Xanadu province
Jani Radebaugh,Ralph D. Lorenz,S. D. Wall,R. L. Kirk,Charles A. Wood,Jonathan I. Lunine,Ellen R. Stofan,Rosaly M. C. Lopes,P. Valora,Tom G. Farr,Alexander G. Hayes,Bryan Stiles,Giuseppe Mitri,Howard A. Zebker,M. A. Janssen,Lauren Wye,A. Legall,K. L. Mitchell,Flora Paganelli,Richard West,E. L. Schaller +20 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors suggest that Xanadu is one of the oldest terrains on Titan and that its origin and evolution have been controlled and shaped by compressional and extensional tectonism in the icy crust and ongoing erosion by methane rainfall.