Heuristic Quality Coefficients for Interferometric Phase Linking

eess.SP arXiv:2510.24512
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Abstract

In multitemporal InSAR, phase linking (PL) refers to the estimation of a single-reference interferometric phase history for distributed scatterers (DS) from the information contained in the sample coherence matrix. Because the phase information in this matrix is typically inconsistent, DS processing needs practical reliability indicators to decide whether a pixel's PL estimate is sufficiently supported by the data for subsequent deformation analysis. For maximum-likelihood estimation, uncertainty can be quantified via Fisher-information-based covariance estimates, but no analogous, generally applicable uncertainty quantification is available for the broad range of non-ML methods. We propose three heuristic quality coefficients within a unified mathematical framework that covers common PL methods: (1) a method-specific goodness-of-fit coefficient that normalizes the achieved PL objective between a method-consistent upper bound and an empirically modeled noise floor level; (2) a closure phase coefficient computed from the sample coherence matrix in advance; and (3) an ambiguity coefficient that compares the obtained PL estimate with the best alternative in its orthogonal complement in the solution space. All coefficients are normalized to the interval $[0,1]$, where 1 indicates maximum reliability and 0 matches the behavior expected under pure noise. Simulations under exponential and seasonal decorrelation models show that the goodness-of-fit coefficient tracks the normalized absolute phase error most consistently, whereas the closure phase coefficient provides an a priori indicator for pre-screening. Experiments on a TerraSAR-X stack over Visp, Switzerland, reveal plausible spatial patterns across urban and vegetated areas and show that the ambiguity coefficient provides complementary information, especially in regions with temporally varying scattering mechanisms.

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