The British Geotechnical Association (BGA) is the principal
association for geotechnical engineers in the United Kingdom.

The Use of InSAR for Ground Investigation and Monitoring - Postponed

BGA Meeting
  • 21.04.2020
  • 18:00 - 19:30
  • Godfrey Mitchell Lecture Theatre, Institution of Civil Engineers, One Great George Street, Westminster, London SW1P 3AA
  • Organiser: British Geotechnical Association
  • Download to Calendar
No description available

The Use of InSAR for Ground Investigation and Monitoring

by Dr Richard Ghail

of

Royal Holloway, University of London

Tuesday 21st April at 18:00 hours

Institution of Civil Engineers, One Great George Street, Westminster, London SW1P 3AA

This event has been postponed.

All BGA events up to August 2020 are postponed, and will be re-arranged for later dates in the 2020-21 session. The BGA regrets that this is necessary, but it is not appropriate to hold large meetings under the prevailing circumstances due to Covid-19.


This event is free to attend, advance booking is not required. Tea & coffee will be available from 17:30.

A flyer can be downloaded here.

Synopsis

Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) is a family of techniques for processing satellite radar imagery in order to measure ground displacements. It can offer significant spatial coverage (orders of 1000 km2 constrained only by processing time) thus potentially providing significant advantages (cost, time, coverage and accuracy) over more traditional techniques such as levelling and GPS.

InSAR is now widely used to characterize natural hazards such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, as well as human induced changes such as mine subsidence and aquifer drawdown. It is now possible to distinguish, for example, geological fault driven movement from aquifer recharge by separating both horizontal and vertical ground movements.

With nearly three decades of data, Persistent Scatterer Interferometry (PSI) is able to achieve sub-millimetre precision in displacement; analysis of long time-series data as part of the site investigation desk study can identify unusual patterns of displacement from past land use, e.g. cemeteries and historic landfill, and natural hazards such as faults and buried hollows.

However, analysis of InSAR and PSI data requires care and experience to identify causes of anomalies and eliminate artefacts.

Speaker biography

Dr Richard Ghail is a Reader in Planetary and Engineering Geology at Royal Holloway, before which he spent most of the last decade in Civil Engineering at Imperial. He has worked with synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data for more than 25 years and understands its strangeness as an imaging system, and the use of its phase information for change detection. For the first time we now have a tool that can measure the rates of vertical and horizontal movement at the mm/yr level, characteristic of low seismicity continental interiors. He applies these techniques to help predict ground engineering problems and groundwater flow, and is developing new tools using the full amplitude, phase and polarimetric components of SAR data. Richard also leads a proposed mission to Venus, currently under study by ESA and NASA, to apply these techniques to better understand our closest planetary neighbour.

Drinks sponsor

Please join us afterwards for drinks sponsored by Tre Altamira.

Become a Member

Join the British Geotechnical Association to keep up to date with the latest BGA news