High-intensity mining activities in coal mining areas have produced large-gradient surface deformation, posing severe challenges to deformation monitoring using Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) techniques based on C-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data. This study systematically evaluated the applicability of L-band LuTan-1 SAR (L-SAR) data versus C-band Sentinel-1A data for monitoring mining-induced surface deformation, using the Guqiao Coal Mine in Huainan as the study area. Based on 10 ascending-track and 13 descending-track L-SAR images and 42 Sentinel-1A images, deformation retrievals were performed using Differential InSAR (DInSAR) and the Small Baseline Subset (SBAS) InSAR approach, respectively, and the results were validated against independent levelling measurements. Results indicate that the mean coherence of descending- and ascending-track L-SAR interferometric pairs are 0.42 and 0.45, respectively, substantially higher than Sentinel-1A’s 0.25. In the DInSAR analysis along profile A–A′, the maximum line-of-sight (LOS) displacement obtained from descending- and ascending-track L-SAR are −0.40 m and −0.43 m, respectively, compared with −0.25 m from Sentinel-1A. In the SBAS-InSAR time-series analysis, descending- and ascending-track L-SAR yield 209,418 and 228,388 coherent points, respectively, clearly revealing the temporal evolution of surface deformation; their maximum LOS deformation rates are approximately −1.54 m·yr−1 and −2.0 m·yr−1, respectively. By contrast, Sentinel-1A selects only 81,669 coherent points, with severe loss of coherence in the subsidence center and a maximum LOS deformation rate of about −0.48 m·yr−1. Accuracy validation shows that the Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) of vertical displacements obtained from DInSAR monitoring results based on descending and ascending L-SAR data is 16.1 mm, satisfying the requirement of centimeter-level accuracy for mining area surface subsidence monitoring. The study demonstrates the pronounced advantages of L-SAR for monitoring large-gradient, nonlinear deformation in mining environments. L-band data outperform C-band Sentinel-1A across coherence preservation, deformation sensitivity, and monitoring accuracy, providing a scientific basis for the broader application of domestic L-band SAR satellites in disaster risk assessment and long-term time-series monitoring of mining-induced subsidence.
Cheng et al. (Fri,) studied this question.