Summary: | According to historical records, land subsidence has been occurring in Xi'an, China, since the 1960s, characterized by complex land subsidence patterns. This subsidence has the potential to cause serious societal and economic problems during the process of urbanization. Long-term, large-scale monitoring and dynamic high precision tracking of the evolution of surface deformation associated with geohazards is a prerequisite for effective prevention or advance warning of geological disasters. Synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR), a satellite remote sensing technology, can facilitate such monitoring. Both currently operating and planned SAR satellites would provide extensive amounts of SAR data. In this article, we describe an approach for continuously updating long-term multisensor InSAR deformation time series using robust sequential least squares. It is successfully applied to near-real-time monitoring of the long-term evolution of surface deformation in Xi'an, China, from January 3, 2007 to February 12, 2021, using four SAR satellites: ALOS/PALSAR-1, TerraSAR-X, ALOS/PALSAR-2, and Sentinel-1A. In order to analyze deformation evolution, temporal independent component analysis was used to interpret deformation patterns. We found that land subsidence in Xi'an has slowed and even halted in some areas. However, large areas are uplifting, which presents a potential for geohazards. We conclude that the proposed approach using continuously updated deformation time series from multisensor InSAR can provide near-real-time deformation measurements, which are necessary for an early warning system.
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