scholarly journals Ground deformation analysis on road infrastructure in north buton Indonesia using interferometric synthetic aperture radar (Insar)

Author(s):  
L M G Jaya ◽  
J Safani ◽  
A Okto ◽  
M Hasbi ◽  
A Kadir
2014 ◽  
Vol 41 (17) ◽  
pp. 6123-6130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergey V. Samsonov ◽  
Alexander P. Trishchenko ◽  
Kristy Tiampo ◽  
Pablo J. González ◽  
Yu Zhang ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
M. Czarnogorska ◽  
S. Samsonov ◽  
D. White

The research objectives of the Aquistore CO<sub>2</sub> storage project are to design, adapt, and test non-seismic monitoring methods for measurement, and verification of CO<sub>2</sub> storage, and to integrate data to determine subsurface fluid distributions, pressure changes and associated surface deformation. Aquistore site is located near Estevan in Southern Saskatchewan on the South flank of the Souris River and west of the Boundary Dam Power Station and the historical part of Estevan coal mine in southeastern Saskatchewan, Canada. Several monitoring techniques were employed in the study area including advanced satellite Differential Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (DInSAR) technique, GPS, tiltmeters and piezometers. The targeted CO<sub>2</sub> injection zones are within the Winnipeg and Deadwood formations located at > 3000 m depth. An array of monitoring techniques was employed in the study area including advanced satellite Differential Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (DInSAR) with established corner reflectors, GPS, tiltmeters and piezometers stations. We used airborne LIDAR data for topographic phase estimation, and DInSAR product geocoding. Ground deformation maps have been calculated using Multidimensional Small Baseline Subset (MSBAS) methodology from 134 RADARSAT-2 images, from five different beams, acquired during 20120612&ndash;20140706. We computed and interpreted nine time series for selected places. MSBAS results indicate slow ground deformation up to 1 cm/year not related to CO<sub>2</sub> injection but caused by various natural and anthropogenic causes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandro Novellino ◽  
Luke Bateson ◽  
Colm Jordan

AbstractSubsurface geonergy can induce ground motion and seismicity, however a scarcity of observations usually obscures the mechanisms underpinning such behaviour. Here, we analyse Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) data from ERS, ENVISAT and Sentinel-1 satellites for the period 1995–2017 and interpret ground deformation in the area of the planned Cheshire UK GeoEnergy Observatory ahead of facility contruction. Ground motion is dominated by the compaction of tidal flat deposits overlying two paleo-valleys, trending NNW–SSE. The western paleo-valley experienced faster subsidence rates in the period 1995–2007, whereas the eastern paleo-valley subsided faster in the period 2016–2017. The research highlights how baseline assessment can help differentiate natural variation from any anthropogenic effects associated with the growth of new subsurface technologies.


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