Authors:
Dr. Batuhan Osmanoglu | NASA Goddard Space Flight Center | United States
Dr. Paul Rosen | NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Stephen Horst | Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
Dr. Shadi Oveisgharan | Jet Propulsion Lab
Ala Khazendar
Christopher A. Jones | NASA Langley Research Center
Jordan Bell | NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
Dr. Andrew L Molthan | NASA Marshall Space Flight Center | United States
Ekaterina Tymofyeyeva | Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
Dr. Gerald W. Bawden | NASA Headquarters
The United States National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine 2017 Earth Decadal Survey recommended a new NASA “Designated” program element to address a set of five high-value Targeted Observables during the next decadal period. In response to that recommendation, and based on guidance from NASA’s Earth Science Division, a team has been formed to perform an architecture study associated with the Surface Deformation and Change (SDC) Targeted Observable. Surface deformation measurements are critical for studies related to earthquakes, volcanoes, landslides, and changes in groundwater levels and corresponding subsidence or uplift, as well as measuring ice sheet and glacial stability and their contributions to sea level rise, permafrost thaw, surface change. The Decadal Survey report recognizes this criticality for its Earth Surface and Interior objectives, and also for a number of Hydrology and Climatology objectives, identifying twenty-three surface deformation-related objectives throughout the report.
While the Decadal Report Surface Deformation and Change Targeted Observable is focused on surface geodesy (i.e. change in position of the surface), NASA has directed that the scope of the study include some architectures that intrinsically support research- and applications-grade measurements of observables such as soil moisture, vegetation structure, disturbance, agricultural monitoring, wetlands processes, coastal processes, ocean processes, sea ice hazards monitoring (e.g. icebergs and polar sea-lane variability). Based on this, the SDC architecture study will explore architectures that are optimized for phase-based geodetic performance and architectures that also support amplitude-based radiometrically accurate imagery. A science and applications traceability matrix (SATM) has been developed for this expanded set of geophysical observables and is online for public comments.
SDC’s observational requirements for many of these objectives cover a number of performance parameters such as spatial resolution, deformation precision and repeat interval. In reaching its final recommendation on a cost-effective strategy for the SDC observable, the Decadal Survey Committee presumed that the measurement implementation will involve Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) and Interferometric SAR (InSAR) technologies. The Decadal Survey references the NASA-ISRO SAR (NISAR) Mission design performance of 12-day repeat interferometry, and calls for shorter repeat cycle (sub-weekly to daily), potentially at the expense of spatial resolution if necessary to stay within the recommended development cost.
The SDC Study has three main objectives: 1) Identify and characterize a diverse set of observing architectures, including innovative observing systems that can disrupt the norm for interferometric SAR observations; 2) Assess the ability of each of the architectures to meet SDC objectives, including cost effectiveness; 3) Perform sufficient in-depth design study of one selected architecture to enable initiation of a Phase A concept study. To accomplish these objectives, the study team is engaging US national expertise in Earth Science research, applications, technology, mission formulation and implementation. The team comprises NASA centers with relevant expertise and is engaging the international community, government, academia, and industry.
The SDC architecture study will examine the research and applications benefits of the data sets derived from these existing and planned systems, which may be complicated by different data access modalities for various satellites, ranging from free and open data to commercial but restricted data sets. In this study, we are working with other agencies (space agencies and data sponsors), and commercial providers to understand and quantitatively assess the ways in which the variety of data can be applied to scientific research and other applications. The study team has developed a simulation tool to quantitatively assess the performance of the existing and planned SAR constellations, which will be considered as an observing system. This will allow research and applications community members to gain a more quantitative understanding of the critical gaps in our observations from the government Programs of Record and the commercial sector that NASA must fill to meet the SDC science and application objectives.
The results generated from the simulation tool and the SATM parameters form the inputs to the value framework (VF). The VF assesses the benefits, costs, and risks of each architecture for the science and applications communities, as captured in the Decadal Survey. The needs of the applications community are documented in a study report focusing on the entire value chain of non-research, Earth observation data users. The study found that the applications community will also benefit from an interferometric SAR with ~10m resolution, global coverage, and multi-polarization data with a weekly sampling plan collected over a decadal time frame. Some community members also expressed interest in multi-band observations. A community assessment report is being developed expanding this initial study.
In summary, the SDC Study commenced in October 2018 and is planned to run for five years. In the initial two years, community needs were collected and parsed into the SATM. Technology readiness and partnerships opportunities were assessed, and about forty architectures were identified. These architectures are now being evaluated against the needs, and a down-selection will be conducted this year using the value framework. The remaining time will be spent in more detailed studies of the down-selected architectures, with a final down-selection and report at the end in preparation for mission implementation. In this paper, we will describe the status of the study and how potential partners can become involved.