The IRIDE constellation is an ambitious Italian space program that will support the national authorities in their analyses and monitoring activities, with a focus on Italian territory mapping. It will comprise a series of small satellite subconstellations exploiting a wide range of remote sensing technologies. This article analyses the NIMBUS X-Band synthetic aperture radar (SAR) IRIDE subconstellation, exploring potential orbital configurations beyond the more conventional and widespread dawn-dusk sun-synchronous orbit (SSO) one. In particular, starting from the mission target, we show that a 49° mid-inclination orbit (MIO) in a right-looking StripMap acquisition mode represents a highly effective choice for NIMBUS. We demonstrate that this configuration enhances the systematic coverage of the Italian territory with six nodal days of interferometric revisit time and high spatial resolution, thereby facilitating detailed observations of both natural phenomena and anthropic activities. In terms of differential SAR interferometry (DInSAR) performance, we prove that MIOs do not show significant limitations for what attains the critical baseline and geometric distortions. In addition, MIOs may lead to future advances in creating 3-D displacement maps because they allow for the recovery of the North-South deformation component that, conversely, cannot be precisely measured with DInSAR systems operating in SSO.

Constellation Design and Analysis for Spaceborne DInSAR Mapping in Mid-Inclination Orbits: The IRIDE NIMBUS Mission

Cotugno, Federica;Berardino, Paolo;Bonano, Manuela;Manunta, Michele;Lanari, Riccardo
2024

Abstract

The IRIDE constellation is an ambitious Italian space program that will support the national authorities in their analyses and monitoring activities, with a focus on Italian territory mapping. It will comprise a series of small satellite subconstellations exploiting a wide range of remote sensing technologies. This article analyses the NIMBUS X-Band synthetic aperture radar (SAR) IRIDE subconstellation, exploring potential orbital configurations beyond the more conventional and widespread dawn-dusk sun-synchronous orbit (SSO) one. In particular, starting from the mission target, we show that a 49° mid-inclination orbit (MIO) in a right-looking StripMap acquisition mode represents a highly effective choice for NIMBUS. We demonstrate that this configuration enhances the systematic coverage of the Italian territory with six nodal days of interferometric revisit time and high spatial resolution, thereby facilitating detailed observations of both natural phenomena and anthropic activities. In terms of differential SAR interferometry (DInSAR) performance, we prove that MIOs do not show significant limitations for what attains the critical baseline and geometric distortions. In addition, MIOs may lead to future advances in creating 3-D displacement maps because they allow for the recovery of the North-South deformation component that, conversely, cannot be precisely measured with DInSAR systems operating in SSO.
2024
Istituto per il Rilevamento Elettromagnetico dell'Ambiente - IREA
Constellation design
COSMO-SkyMed (CSK)
differential SAR interferometry (DInSAR)
IRIDE
mid-inclination orbit (MIO)
NIMBUS
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/539101
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