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Markus Huchler

Bio: Markus Huchler is an academic researcher from Airbus Defence and Space. The author has contributed to research in topics: Synthetic aperture radar & Radar imaging. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications receiving 904 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The unique data availability performance of the Sentinel-1 routine operations makes the mission particularly suitable for emergency response support, marine surveillance, ice monitoring and interferometric applications such as detection of subsidence and landslides.

1,260 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
13 Jul 2014
TL;DR: The Copernicus Sentinel-1 Earth Radar Observatory, a mission funded by the European Union and developed by ESA, is a constellation of two C-band radar satellites, which have been conceived to be a continuous and reliable source of SAR imagery for operational applications such as mapping of global landmasses, coastal zones and monitoring of shipping routes as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The Copernicus Sentinel-1 Earth Radar Observatory, a mission funded by the European Union and developed by ESA, is a constellation of two C-band radar satellites. The satellites have been conceived to be a continuous and reliable source of C-band SAR imagery for operational applications such as mapping of global landmasses, coastal zones and monitoring of shipping routes. The Sentinel-1 satellites are built by an industrial consortium led by Thales Alenia Space Italia as Prime Contractor and with AIRBUS Defence and Space as SAR Instrument Contractor. The paper describes the general satellite architecture, AIT flow and the satellite key performances. It provides also an overview on the CSAR Instrument, its development status and prelaunch SAR performance prediction.

12 citations

23 Apr 2012
TL;DR: The paper describes the C-SAR instrument for the GMES Sentinel-1 mission and the main focus on this paper is on the SAS, since there is a dedicated paper on the SES within the same session.
Abstract: The paper describes the C-SAR instrument for the GMES Sentinel-1 mission. After a brief introduction a description of the overall C-SAR instrument as well as of the design and development status of its major subsystems (i.e. the SES Electronic Subsystem (SES) and the SAR Antenna Subsystem (SAS)) is given. The main focus on this paper is on the SAS, since there is a dedicated paper on the SES within the same session.

7 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
10 May 2010
TL;DR: The ESA Sentinels constitute the first series of operational satellites responding to the Earth observation needs of the EU-ESA Global Monitoring for Environment and Security (GMES) programme as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The ESA Sentinels constitute the first series of operational satellites responding to the Earth Observation needs of the EU-ESA Global Monitoring for Environment and Security (GMES) programme. The GMES space component relies on existing and planned space assets as well as on new complementary developments by ESA. This paper describes the Sentinel-1 mission, an imaging synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite constellation at C-band. It provides an overview of the mission requirements, its applications and the technical concept for the system.

6 citations

23 Apr 2012
TL;DR: The Sentinel-1 Antenna Model is presented which calculates the far field pattern of the different SAR operational modes based on subarray near field measurements (active element pattern) and the excellent agreement found between the Ant antenna Model prediction and far field patterns acquired by Planar Near Field measurements (PNFS) is demonstrated.
Abstract: The C-SAR Antenna Subsystem (SAS) of the European Radar Observatory Sentinel-1 is based on an active dual-polarized phased array consisting of 280 waveguide subarrays for each polarization. In this paper, the Sentinel-1 Antenna Model is presented which calculates the far field pattern of the different SAR operational modes based on subarray near field measurements (active element pattern). Due to the high flexibility of the Antenna Model it is also highly attractive for other spaceborne SAR missions. The excellent agreement found between the Antenna Model prediction and far field pattern acquired by Planar Near Field measurements (PNFS) is demonstrated.

5 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the main 3D printing methods, materials and their development in trending applications was carried out in this paper, where the revolutionary applications of AM in biomedical, aerospace, buildings and protective structures were discussed.
Abstract: Freedom of design, mass customisation, waste minimisation and the ability to manufacture complex structures, as well as fast prototyping, are the main benefits of additive manufacturing (AM) or 3D printing. A comprehensive review of the main 3D printing methods, materials and their development in trending applications was carried out. In particular, the revolutionary applications of AM in biomedical, aerospace, buildings and protective structures were discussed. The current state of materials development, including metal alloys, polymer composites, ceramics and concrete, was presented. In addition, this paper discussed the main processing challenges with void formation, anisotropic behaviour, the limitation of computer design and layer-by-layer appearance. Overall, this paper gives an overview of 3D printing, including a survey on its benefits and drawbacks as a benchmark for future research and development.

4,159 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of the GMES Sentinel-2 mission including a technical system concept overview, image quality, Level 1 data processing and operational applications is provided.

2,517 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A multilevel DL architecture that targets land cover and crop type classification from multitemporal multisource satellite imagery outperforms the one with MLPs allowing us to better discriminate certain summer crop types.
Abstract: Deep learning (DL) is a powerful state-of-the-art technique for image processing including remote sensing (RS) images. This letter describes a multilevel DL architecture that targets land cover and crop type classification from multitemporal multisource satellite imagery. The pillars of the architecture are unsupervised neural network (NN) that is used for optical imagery segmentation and missing data restoration due to clouds and shadows, and an ensemble of supervised NNs. As basic supervised NN architecture, we use a traditional fully connected multilayer perceptron (MLP) and the most commonly used approach in RS community random forest, and compare them with convolutional NNs (CNNs). Experiments are carried out for the joint experiment of crop assessment and monitoring test site in Ukraine for classification of crops in a heterogeneous environment using nineteen multitemporal scenes acquired by Landsat-8 and Sentinel-1A RS satellites. The architecture with an ensemble of CNNs outperforms the one with MLPs allowing us to better discriminate certain summer crop types, in particular maize and soybeans, and yielding the target accuracies more than 85% for all major crops (wheat, maize, sunflower, soybeans, and sugar beet).

1,155 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper provides a review of the main PSI algorithms proposed in the literature, describing the main approaches and the most important works devoted to single aspects of PSI, and discusses the main open PSI problems and the associated future research lines.
Abstract: Persistent Scatterer Interferometry (PSI) is a powerful remote sensing technique able to measure and monitor displacements of the Earth’s surface over time. Specifically, PSI is a radar-based technique that belongs to the group of differential interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR). This paper provides a review of such PSI technique. It firstly recalls the basic principles of SAR interferometry, differential SAR interferometry and PSI. Then, a review of the main PSI algorithms proposed in the literature is provided, describing the main approaches and the most important works devoted to single aspects of PSI. A central part of this paper is devoted to the discussion of different characteristics and technical aspects of PSI, e.g. SAR data availability, maximum deformation rates, deformation time series, thermal expansion component of PSI observations, etc. The paper then goes through the most important PSI validation activities, which have provided valuable inputs for the PSI development and its acceptability at scientific, technical and commercial level. This is followed by a description of the main PSI applications developed in the last fifteen years. The paper concludes with a discussion of the main open PSI problems and the associated future research lines.

661 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 2020
TL;DR: The Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) was launched to the International Space Station in late 2018 to provide high-quality measurements of forest vertical structure in temperate and tropical forests between 51.6° N & S latitude as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Obtaining accurate and widespread measurements of the vertical structure of the Earth’s forests has been a long-sought goal for the ecological community. Such observations are critical for accurately assessing the existing biomass of forests, and how changes in this biomass caused by human activities or variations in climate may impact atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Additionally, the three-dimensional structure of forests is a key component of habitat quality and biodiversity at local to regional scales. The Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) was launched to the International Space Station in late 2018 to provide high-quality measurements of forest vertical structure in temperate and tropical forests between 51.6° N & S latitude. The GEDI instrument is a geodetic-class laser altimeter/waveform lidar comprised of 3 lasers that produce 8 transects of structural information. Over its two-year nominal lifetime GEDI is anticipated to provide over 10 billion waveforms at a footprint resolution of 25 ​m. These data will be used to derive a variety of footprint and gridded products, including canopy height, canopy foliar profiles, Leaf Area Index (LAI), sub-canopy topography and biomass. Additionally, data from GEDI are used to demonstrate the efficacy of its measurements for prognostic ecosystem modeling, habit and biodiversity studies, and for fusion using radar and other remote sensing instruments. GEDI science and technology are unique: no other space-based mission has been created that is specifically optimized for retrieving vegetation vertical structure. As such, GEDI promises to advance our understanding of the importance of canopy vertical variations within an ecological paradigm based on structure, composition and function.

449 citations