Fucheng-1 is China’s first commercial synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite equipped with interferometric capabilities. Since its launch in 2023, it has demonstrated strong potential across a range of application domains. However, a comprehensive and systematic evaluation of its overall performance, including its time-series monitoring capability, is still lacking. This study applies the Small Baseline Subset (SBAS-InSAR) method to conduct the first systematic processing and evaluation of 22 Fucheng-1 images acquired between 2023 and 2024. A total of 45 potential landslides were identified and subsequently validated through field investigations and UAV-based LiDAR data. Comparative analysis with Sentinel-1 and ALOS-2 indicates that Fucheng-1 demonstrates superior performance in small-scale deformation identification, temporal-variation characterization, and maintaining a high density of coherent pixels. Specifically, in the time-series InSAR-based potential landslide identification, Fucheng-1 identified 13 small-scale potential landslides, whereas Sentinel-1 identified none; the number of identifications is approximately 2.17 times that of ALOS-2. For time-series subsidence monitoring, the deformation magnitudes retrieved from Fucheng-1 are generally larger than those from Sentinel-1, mainly attributable to finer spatial sampling enabled by its higher spatial resolution and a higher maximum detectable deformation gradient. Moreover, as landslide size decreases, the advantages of Fucheng-1 in deformation identification and subsidence estimation become increasingly evident. Interferometric results further show that the number of high-coherence pixels for Fucheng-1 is 7–8 times that of co-temporal Sentinel-1 and 1.1–1.4 times that of ALOS-2, providing more high-quality observations for time-series inversion and thereby supporting a more detailed and spatially continuous reconstruction of deformation fields. Meanwhile, the orbital stability of Fucheng-1 is comparable to that of Sentinel-1, and its maximum detectable deformation gradient in mountainous terrain reaches twice that of Sentinel-1. Overall, this study provides the first systematic validation of the time-series InSAR capability of Fucheng-1 under complex terrain conditions, offering essential support and a solid foundation for the operational deployment of InSAR technologies based on China’s domestic SAR satellite constellation.
Tang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.