GPR Clutter Reflection Noise-Filtering through Singular Value Decomposition in the Bidimensional Spectral Domain
Metadatos
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MDPI
Materia
Applied geophysics Digital signal processing Enhancement of 3D-GPR datasets Clutter noise removal Spectral filtering
Date
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Oliveira, R.J.; Caldeira, B.; Teixidó, T.; Borges, J.F. GPR Clutter Reflection Noise-Filtering through Singular Value Decomposition in the Bidimensional Spectral Domain. Remote Sens. 2021, 13, 2005. https:// doi.org/10.3390/rs13102005
Patrocinador
Project “Innovación abierta e inteligente en la EUROACE” 0049_INNOACE_4_E - European Union (European Regional Development Fund) COMPETE 2020; Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) projects UIDB/04683/2020-ICT (Institute of Earth Sciences) and SFRH/BSAB/143063/2018Résumé
Usually, in ground-penetrating radar (GPR) datasets, the user defines the limits between
the useful signal and the noise through standard filtering to isolate the effective signal as much as
possible. However, there are true reflections that mask the coherent reflectors that can be considered
noise. In archaeological sites these clutter reflections are caused by scattering with origin in subsurface
elements (e.g., isolated masonry, ceramic objects, and archaeological collapses). Its elimination is
difficult because the wavelet parameters similar to coherent reflections and there is a risk of creating
artefacts. In this study, a procedure to filter the clutter reflection noise (CRN) from GPR datasets is
presented. The CRN filter is a singular value decomposition-based method (SVD), applied in the 2D
spectral domain. This CRN filtering was tested in a dataset obtained from a controlled laboratory
environment, to establish a mathematical control of this algorithm. Additionally, it has been applied
in a 3D-GPR dataset acquired in the Roman villa of Horta da Torre (Fronteira, Portugal), which is
an uncontrolled environment. The results show an increase in the quality of archaeological GPR
planimetry that was verified via archaeological excavation.