EGU21-15946, updated on 08 Jan 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15946
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Large-scale, high-resolution maps of interseismic strain accumulation from Sentinel-1, and incorporation of along-track measurements

Andy Hooper1, Pawan Piromthong1, Tim Wright1, Jonathan Weiss2, Milan Milan Lazecky1, Yasser Maghsoudi1, Chris Rollins1, Yu Morishita3, John Elliott1, and Barry Parsons4
Andy Hooper et al.
  • 1COMET, University of Leeds, COMET, Leeds, United Kingdom (a.hooper@leeds.ac.uk)
  • 2University of Potsdam , Potsdam, Germany
  • 3Geospatial Information Authority of Japan, Tsukuba City, Japan
  • 4COMET, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

High-resolution geodetic measurements of crustal deformation from InSAR have the potential to provide crucial constraints on a region’s tectonics, geodynamics and seismic hazard. Here, we present a high-resolution crustal velocity field for the Alpine-Himalayan Seismic Belt (AHSB) derived from Sentinel-1 InSAR and GNSS. We create time series and average velocities from ~220,000 interferograms covering an area of 15 million km2, with an average of 170 acquisitions per measurement point. We tie the velocities to a Eurasian reference frame by jointly inverting the InSAR data with GNSS data to produce a low-resolution model of 3D surface velocities. We then use the referenced InSAR velocities to invert for high-resolution east-west and sub-vertical velocity fields for the entire region. The sub-vertical velocities, which also include a small component of north-south motion, are dominated by non-tectonic deformation, such as subsidence due to water extraction. The east-west velocity field, however, reveals the tectonics of the AHSB with an unprecedented level of detail.

The approach described above only provides good constraints on horizontal displacement in the east-west direction, with the north-south component provided by low-resolution GNSS measurements. Sentinel-1 does also have the potential to provide measurements that are sensitive to north-south motion, through exploitation of the burst overlap areas produced by the TOPS acquisition mode. These along-track measurements have lower precision than line-of-sight InSAR and are more effected by ionospheric noise, but have the advantage of being almost insensitive to tropospheric noise. We present a time series approach to tease out the subtle along-track signals associated with interseismic strain. Our approach includes improvements to the mitigation of ionospheric noise and we also investigate different filtering approaches to optimize the reduction of decorrelation noise. In contrast to the relative measurements of line-of-sight InSAR, these along-track measurements are automatically provided in a global reference frame. We present results from five years of data for the West-Lut Fault in eastern Iran and the Chaman Fault in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Our results agree well with independent GNSS measurements; however, the denser coverage of the technique allows us to also detect the variation in slip rate along the faults.

Finally, we demonstrate the improvement in the resolution of horizontal strain rates when including these along-track measurements, in addition to the conventional line-of-sight InSAR measurements.

How to cite: Hooper, A., Piromthong, P., Wright, T., Weiss, J., Milan Lazecky, M., Maghsoudi, Y., Rollins, C., Morishita, Y., Elliott, J., and Parsons, B.: Large-scale, high-resolution maps of interseismic strain accumulation from Sentinel-1, and incorporation of along-track measurements, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15946, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15946, 2021.

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