New open-source software enhances satellite geodesy capability

5 June 2017

Scientists from Geoscience Australia have released new software that will improve the ability to process big remotely-sensed satellite datasets.

The new "PyRate" software being presented this week at the European Space Agency's Fringe 2017 workshop in Helsinki, Finland is open source Python software for collating  and analysing Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) displacement time series data.

InSAR is a non-invasive geodetic method that detects changes in the height of the Earth's surface using remotely-sensed satellite imagery. This is a highly accurate satellite monitoring technique that uses two or more Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images of an area to identify patterns of surface movement over time.

By monitoring movements of the Earth's surface, scientists can improve their understanding of how the Earth's crust changes over time, including changes in elevation caused by larger earthquakes and potential land subsidence caused by human activities such as groundwater and resource extraction.

The image shows the coverage and density of Sentinel-1 interferometric wide swath image data in the Copernicus Australia Data Hub for the period October 2014 - April 2017. The majority of these 8314 scenes are located in south-east Australia (55-65 scene density), however coverage over the remaining continent is increasing, with a density of least 15-20 scenes.Coverage and density of Sentinel-1 interferometric wide swath image data available via the Copernicus Australia Data Hub, as at 30 April 2017

The new software builds upon a Python-language translation of the University of Leeds' ¿-RATE software. This provides a portable and free solution that is scalable from desktop machines for small area processing to large multi-node super computers for conducting regional or continental-scale analyses.

The new software will enable Geoscience Australia to scale up its InSAR processing capability to run on the Australian National University's National Computational Infrastructure facility super computer. It will also support other scientists to make use of the ever expanding national archive of Sentinel-1 SAR data available via the Copernicus Australia data hub, particularly for InSAR time series analysis.

The new PyRate software will be applied to data obtained for a number of existing Geoscience Australia projects, including InSAR monitoring in Queensland's Surat Basin and in the Macarthur region, south of Sydney.

A computer generated image showing surface movement following the extraction of coal from a subsurface longwall mine. This increase in range is interpreted as movement away from the satellite, or a downward movement of the ground.Deformation time slice generated by the PyRate software showing the increase (positive) in range between the ground
and radar satellite in three locations above longwall coal mining operations.

The PyRate version 0.2.0 software is available through Github and via PyPI, the python package index, with additional supporting documentation provided.

Further information