Speckle Noise Filtering for Sea SAR Image

Author(s):  
Yongxin Jiang ◽  
Xiaotong Wang ◽  
Xiaogang Xu ◽  
Xiyong Ye
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 84-90
Author(s):  
R. Lalchhanhima ◽  
◽  
Debdatta Kandar ◽  
R. Chawngsangpuii ◽  
Vanlalmuansangi Khenglawt ◽  
...  

Fuzzy C-Means is an unsupervised clustering algorithm for the automatic clustering of data. Synthetic Aperture Radar Image Segmentation has been a challenging task because of the presence of speckle noise. Therefore the segmentation process can not directly rely on the intensity information alone but must consider several derived features in order to get satisfactory segmentation results. In this paper, it is attempted to use the fuzzy nature of classification for the purpose of unsupervised region segmentation in which FCM is employed. Different features are obtained by filtering of the image by using different spatial filters and are selected for segmentation criteria. The segmentation performance is determined by the accuracy compared with a different state of the art techniques proposed recently.


2012 ◽  
Vol 241-244 ◽  
pp. 2630-2637
Author(s):  
Chun Rong Wei ◽  
Chu He ◽  
Hong Sun

In order to reduce the noise sensitivity of the SAR (synthetic aperture radar) image registration, a image registration algorithm which basing on the ratio mutual information (RatioMI) is proposed in this paper. Firstly, the ratio images of the reference image and the floating image are gotten by using the ratio operator, and then take the two ratio images as a similar characteristic quantity to construct the similarity measure function which was used in the optimization process of the image registration experiment. The experimental results of the SAR image registration show that the new registration algorithm which based on the RatioMI is effectively in avoiding the local maxima point problems causing by speckle noise.


Author(s):  
Xiaoqian Yuan ◽  
Chao Chen ◽  
Shan Tian ◽  
Jiandan Zhong

In order to improve the contrast of the difference image and reduce the interference of the speckle noise in the synthetic aperture radar (SAR) image, this paper proposes a SAR image change detection algorithm based on multi-scale feature extraction. In this paper, a kernel matrix with weights is used to extract features of two original images, and then the logarithmic ratio method is used to obtain the difference images of two images, and the change area of the images are extracted. Then, the different sizes of kernel matrix are used to extract the abstract features of different scales of the difference image. This operation can make the difference image have a higher contrast. Finally, the cumulative weighted average is obtained to obtain the final difference image, which can further suppress the speckle noise in the image.


Author(s):  
Khwairakpam Amitab ◽  
Debdatta Kandar ◽  
Arnab K. Maji

Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) are imaging Radar, it uses electromagnetic radiation to illuminate the scanned surface and produce high resolution images in all-weather condition, day and night. Interference of signals causes noise and degrades the quality of the image, it causes serious difficulty in analyzing the images. Speckle is multiplicative noise that inherently exist in SAR images. Artificial Neural Network (ANN) have the capability of learning and is gaining popularity in SAR image processing. Multi-Layer Perceptron (MLP) is a feed forward artificial neural network model that consists of an input layer, several hidden layers, and an output layer. We have simulated MLP with two hidden layer in Matlab. Speckle noises were added to the target SAR image and applied MLP for speckle noise reduction. It is found that speckle noise in SAR images can be reduced by using MLP. We have considered Log-sigmoid, Tan-Sigmoid and Linear Transfer Function for the hidden layers. The MLP network are trained using Gradient descent with momentum back propagation, Resilient back propagation and Levenberg-Marquardt back propagation and comparatively evaluated the performance.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 548 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinzheng Zhang ◽  
Guo Liu ◽  
Ce Zhang ◽  
Peter M. Atkinson ◽  
Xiaoheng Tan ◽  
...  

Change detection is one of the fundamental applications of synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images. However, speckle noise presented in SAR images has a negative effect on change detection, leading to frequent false alarms in the mapping products. In this research, a novel two-phase object-based deep learning approach is proposed for multi-temporal SAR image change detection. Compared with traditional methods, the proposed approach brings two main innovations. One is to classify all pixels into three categories rather than two categories: unchanged pixels, changed pixels caused by strong speckle (false changes), and changed pixels formed by real terrain variation (real changes). The other is to group neighbouring pixels into superpixel objects such as to exploit local spatial context. Two phases are designed in the methodology: (1) Generate objects based on the simple linear iterative clustering (SLIC) algorithm, and discriminate these objects into changed and unchanged classes using fuzzy c-means (FCM) clustering and a deep PCANet. The prediction of this Phase is the set of changed and unchanged superpixels. (2) Deep learning on the pixel sets over the changed superpixels only, obtained in the first phase, to discriminate real changes from false changes. SLIC is employed again to achieve new superpixels in the second phase. Low rank and sparse decomposition are applied to these new superpixels to suppress speckle noise significantly. A further clustering step is applied to these new superpixels via FCM. A new PCANet is then trained to classify two kinds of changed superpixels to achieve the final change maps. Numerical experiments demonstrate that, compared with benchmark methods, the proposed approach can distinguish real changes from false changes effectively with significantly reduced false alarm rates, and achieve up to 99.71% change detection accuracy using multi-temporal SAR imagery.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (15) ◽  
pp. 2371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hadi Salehi ◽  
Javad Vahidi ◽  
Thabet Abdeljawad ◽  
Aziz Khan ◽  
Seyed Yaser Bozorgi Rad

The elimination of multiplicative speckle noise is the main issue in synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images. In this study, a SAR image despeckling filter based on a proposed extended adaptive Wiener filter (EAWF), extended guided filter (EGF), and weighted least squares (WLS) filter is proposed. The proposed EAWF and EGF have been developed from the adaptive Wiener filter (AWF) and guided Filter (GF), respectively. The proposed EAWF can be applied to the SAR image, without the need for logarithmic transformation, considering the fact that the denoising performance of EAWF is better than AWF. The proposed EGF can remove the additive noise and preserve the edges’ information more efficiently than GF. First, the EAWF is applied to the input image. Then, a logarithmic transformation is applied to the resulting EAWF image in order to convert multiplicative noise into additive noise. Next, EGF is employed to remove the additive noise and preserve edge information. In order to remove unwanted spots on the image that is filtered by EGF, it is applied twice with different parameters. Finally, the WLS filter is applied in the homogeneous region. Results show that the proposed algorithm has a better performance in comparison with the other existing filters.


Author(s):  
QINGWEI GAO ◽  
DEXIANG ZHANG ◽  
YANG WANG

As we know, a polarimetric whitening filter can efficiently reduce speckle under the circumstances of keeping the same resolution, but it is not self-adaptive. Although it can be transformed to be self-adaptive by adding a window, the blur is serious on the heterogeneous areas or brightness. In this paper, we present a new algorithm. First, fully polarimetric measurements (HH, HV, VV) are processed by polarimetric whitening filters (PWF) method. Second, the PWF result is de-noised by stationary wavelet transform thresholding. Experimental result shows that this method not only suppresses the speckle noise effectively, but also preserves as many target characteristics of original images as possible. The final visual effect of the recovery SAR image is satisfying.


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