Successful MSc Defense by Laura Obrecht

At the recent EAGLE MSc defenses, Laura Obrecht presented her thesis on the detection of grassland mowing events using Sentinel-1 InSAR coherence and deep learning approaches.

Her work, titled Detektion von Grünlandmahd mit Sentinel-1 InSAR Coherence und einem Deep Learning Framework, explored the potential of combining interferometric SAR coherence information with modern machine learning methods for large-scale grassland monitoring in Germany.

Using 6-day Sentinel-1 time series from 2019, Laura processed interferometric coherence products that were subsequently downscaled to Sentinel-2 spatial resolution. The processing workflow was implemented on the Terrabyte platform and resulted in more than 3 TB of intermediate and final datasets, highlighting the computational challenges associated with dense SAR time series analysis.

Previous studies have demonstrated the suitability of Sentinel-1 coherence for detecting mowing events on grasslands, especially due to the sensitivity of coherence to abrupt vegetation changes. Building upon this foundation, Laura investigated whether a deep learning framework could improve detection performance at larger scales.

The results showed that the Sentinel-1 InSAR coherence approach detected more mowing events than the currently existing Sentinel-2 VIS-based mowing product. However, the increased sensitivity also resulted in a larger number of false positives. One of the most promising findings of the thesis was therefore the complementarity of both approaches: combining Sentinel-1 coherence information with Sentinel-2 optical products appears to significantly improve the overall detection potential.

The work demonstrates again how our EAGLE MSc. students push Earth Observation science forward!

read more news:

EAGLE social ski retreat

EAGLE social ski retreat

To recharge their batteries after an intense semester, some EAGLE students went skiing together in the Austrian Alps, taking the opportunity to experience cold-region environments themselves. Beyond the thrill of the slopes, the trip allowed students to observe snow...