RADAR AND SYNTHETIC APERTURE RADAR BASICS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 39
About This Presentation
Title:

RADAR AND SYNTHETIC APERTURE RADAR BASICS

Description:

RADAR SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING SECTION. JET PROPULSION LABORATORY ... Since radar pulses propagate at the speed of light, the difference to the ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1871
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 40
Provided by: jakobv8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: RADAR AND SYNTHETIC APERTURE RADAR BASICS


1
RADAR AND SYNTHETIC APERTURE RADAR BASICS
  • Dr. Jakob van Zyl
  • RADAR SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING SECTION
  • JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
  • CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
  • 4800 OAK GROVE DRIVE
  • PASADENA, CA 91109

2
OUTLINE
  • PRINCIPLES OF IMAGING RADAR
  • RADAR INTERFEROMETRY FOR HEIGHT MAPPING
  • SIMULTANEOUS ACQUISITION
  • REPEAT TRACK
  • DIFFERENTIAL INTERFEROMETRY FOR CHANGE DETECTION

3
PRINCIPLES OF RADARHOW DOES RADAR WORK?
  • RADAR Radio Detection And Ranging
  • Since radar pulses propagate at the speed of
    light, the difference to the target is
    proportional to the time it takes between the
    transmit event and reception of the radar echo

4
PRINCIPLES OF IMAGING RADARREAL APERTURE RADAR
5
PRINCIPLES OF IMAGING RADARTHE RADAR EQUATION
  • The SNR is derived from the radar equation
  • where
  • Peak transmit power
  • Antenna gain (one way)
  • Transmit system loss
  • Receive system loss
  • Operating noise figure
  • Boltzmanns constant
  • Noise temperature
  • Bandwidth
  • Pulse length
  • Antenna length

6
PRINCIPLES OF IMAGING RADARTHE RADAR EQUATION
  • In order to improve the signal-to-noise ratio for
    a fixed radar frequency, one has (among others)
    the following options
  • Increase the transmitted power. This is usually
    limited by the power available from the
    spacecraft or aircraft.
  • Increase the antenna gain. This requires larger
    antennas, severely affecting the launch mass and
    volume.
  • Increase the pulse length. This means poorer
    resolution.
  • Decrease bandwidth. This also means poorer
    resolution.
  • Fly lower. Increases atmospheric drag, requiring
    more fuel for orbit maintenance.
  • Signal modulation is a way to increase the radar
    pulse length without decreasing the radar range
    resolution
  • All civilian spaceborne SARs, and most civilian
    airborne SARs use linear FM chirps as the
    modulation scheme.

7
PRINCIPLES OF RADAR IMAGINGSYNTHETIC APERTURE
RADAR
BOTH RANGE AND AZIMUTH RESOLUTIONS ARE
INDEPENDENT OF DISTANCE TO TARGET!
8
PRINCIPLES OF RADAR IMAGINGSAR IMAGING
COORDINATE SYSTEM
RADAR
NADIR
FLIGHT
TRACK
FLIGHT
TRAJECTORY
CONSTANT DOPPLER LINES
ILLUMINATED AREA
CONSTANT DISTANCE LINES
9
PRINCIPLES OF RADAR IMAGING POINT TARGET RESPONSE
  • The radar system transmits a series of chirp
    pulses
  • The target will be in view of the radar antenna
    for a limited time period. During this period,
    the distance to the target is
  • Usually, so that

10
PRINCIPLES OF RADAR IMAGING POINT TARGET RESPONSE
  • The phase of the returned signal is
  • The instantaneous frequency of the transmitted
    wave is
  • This signal has a bandwidth of B centered around
    fc

11
PRINCIPLES OF RADAR IMAGING CORRELATION WITH
POINT TARGET RESPONSE
  • This signal has an envelope shown on the right
    that is centered at r(t) and has a 3 dB width
    of
  • This corresponds to a range resolution of
  • The phase of the signal, ignoring the carrier
    term, is
  • It is this phase term that provide the
    interferometric and polarimetric information

12
PRINCIPLES OF RADAR IMAGING RANGE-DOPPLER
PROCESSING
  • The phase of the range compressed signal is
  • The last approximation on the right is valid when
    the antenna beamwidth is very narrow, and is
    usually a good approximation for most higher
    frequency airborne SAR systems
  • The expression above is that of a chirp signal
    with a bandwidth of
    where T is half the time that the target is in
    the field of view of the antenna
  • Note that the bandwidth of the azimuth chirp is a
    function of the range to the target.
  • The range-Doppler processing algorithm uses this
    fact to first perform matched filter range
    compression, followed by matched filter azimuth
    compression

13
PRINCIPLES OF RADAR IMAGING RANGE-DOPPLER
PROCESSING
Raw SAR Data
Range Compressed Data
SAR Image
Azimuth Compression
Range Compression
14
PRINCIPLES OF RADAR IMAGING CLASSICAL SAR
PROCESSING GEOMETRY
insert sphere
15
PRINCIPLES OF IMAGING RADARSAR IMAGE PROJECTION
16
PRINCIPLES OF IMAGING RADARAZIMUTH AMBIGUITIES
Reference Synthetic Aperture Radar Systems
Signal Processing, by Curlander and McDonough,
Wiley, 1991
17
PRINCIPLES OF IMAGING RADARRANGE AMBIGUITIES
Reference Synthetic Aperture Radar Systems
Signal Processing, by Curlander and McDonough,
Wiley, 1991
18
TYPES OF IMAGING RADARS
19
SAR POLARIMETRYSCATTERER AS POLARIZATION
TRANSFORMER
  • Transverse electromagnetic waves are
    characterized mathematically as 2-dimensional
    complex vectors. When a scatterer is illuminated
    by an electromagnetic wave, electrical currents
    are generated inside the scatterer. These
    currents give rise to the scattered waves that
    are reradiated.
  • Mathematically, the scatterer can be
    characterized by a 2x2 complex scattering matrix
    that describes how the scatterer transforms the
    incident vector into the scattered vector.
  • The elements of the scattering matrix are
    functions of frequency and the scattering and
    illuminating geometries.

20
SCATTERING MATRIX
  • Far-field response from scatterer is fully
    characterized by four complex numbers
  • Scattering matrix is also known as Sinclair
    matrix or Jones matrix
  • Must measure a scattering matrix for every
    frequency and all incidence angles

21
POLARIMETER IMPLEMENTATION
22
POLARIZATION SIGNATURE
  • The polarization signature (also known as the
    polarization response) is a convenient graphical
    way to display the received power as a function
    of polarization.
  • Usually displayed assuming identical transmit and
    receive polarizations (co-polarized) or
    orthogonal transmit and receive polarizations
    (cross-polarized).

23
OBSERVED POLARIZATION SIGNATURES SAN FRANCISCO
24
OBSERVED POLARIZATION SIGNATURES L-BAND
POLARIZATION SIGNATURES OF THE OCEAN
25
RADAR INTERFEROMETRYHOW DOES IT WORK?
A2
B
A1
Antenna 1
Antenna 2
Return comes from intersection
SINGLE ANTENNA SAR
INTERFEROMETRIC SAR
26
RADAR INTERFEROMETRYHOW IS IT DONE?
REPEAT TRACK Two radars acquire data from
different vantage points at different times
SIMULTANEOUS BASELINE Two radars acquire data
at the same time
27
RADAR INTERFEROMETRYCOMPARISON OF TECHNIQUES
28
RADAR INTERFEROMETRYTRIGONOMETRY
SIMULTANEOUS BASELINE
29
INTERFEROMETRIC SAR PROCESSING GEOMETRY
insert sphere
30
RADAR INTERFEROMETRYPHASE UNWRAPPING
31
RADAR INTERFEROMETRYHEIGHT ERROR SOURCES
(Reference Zebker, et al., IEEE GRS 32, p.825,
1994)
32
DIFFERENTIAL INTERFEROMETRYHOW DOES IT WORK?
33
DIFFERENTIAL INTERFEROMETRYERROR SOURCES
  • Uncompensated differential motion
  • Atmospheric effects
  • Temporal decorrelation
  • Layover

34
EMERGING SAR TECHNIQUESPOLARIMETRIC
INTERFEROMETRY
  • Polarimetric interferometry is implemented by
    measuring the full scattering matrix at each end
    of the interferometric baseline
  • Currently there are no single baseline systems
    that can acquire this type of data
  • During the last three days of the second
    SIR-C/X-SAR mission the system was operated in
    the repeat-pass interferometric mode, and some
    fully polarimetric interferometric data were
    acquired
  • Using the full scattering matrix one can now
    solve for the optimum polarization to maximize
    the interferometric coherence
  • This problem was first analyzed and reported by
    Cloude and Papathanassiou
  • Using interferograms acquired with different
    polarization combinations, one can also for
    vector differential interferograms
  • These vector differential interferograms have
    been shown to measure large elevation differences
    in forested areas, and cm-level elevation
    differences in agricultural fields

35
EMERGING SAR TECHNIQUES POLARIMETRIC
INTERFEROMETRY COHERENCE
  • Given two complex radar images, the coherence is
    defined as
  • When the full scattering matrix is measured, the
    generalized coherence can be written as
  • To optimize the coherence, one has to solve this
    expression for the two complex vectors

36
EMERGING SAR TECHNIQUES VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL
INTERFEROMETRY
  • The vector differential interferometric phase is

37
EMERGING SAR TECHNIQUES TOPOGRAPHY FROM
POLARIMETRY
  • A technique to infer topography from polarimetric
    signatures is under development by a group led by
    Schuler at the Naval Research Laboratories in the
    USA
  • This technique is based on the fact that if a
    surface is tilted in the azimuth direction, one
    observes a shift in the maximum of the
    polarization signature
  • The scattering matrix of a slightly rough surface
    tilted by an angle a with respect to the
    horizontal is

38
EMERGING SAR TECHNIQUES POLARIZATION SIGNATURE
OF A TILTED SURFACE
ORIENTATION ANGLE
ORIENTATION ANGLE
ELLIPTICITY ANGLE
ELLIPTICITY ANGLE
Flat Surface
Tilted Surface
39
EMERGING SAR TECHNIQUES TOPOGRAPHY FROM
POLARIMETRY
  • By measuring the shift in the maximum of the
    polarization signature, the tilt of the surface
    in the azimuth direction can be estimated.
  • In vegetated areas, P-Band data are used since a
    tilted surface will show a similar behavior if
    the trunk-ground interaction term is relatively
    strong
  • The accuracy with which one can measure the
    surface tilt is determined by the signal to noise
    ratio
  • Once the surface tilts (surface slopes) are
    known, the slopes are integrated in the azimuth
    direction to find the topography as a series of
    azimuth profiles
  • Ground control points are needed to find the
    correct absolute height, and to tie different
    azimuth profiles together
  • By using data acquired in a crossing flight
    pattern, the topography can be derived requiring
    only a single ground control point
  • While the accuracy of this technique is not as
    good as that of interferometry, crude digital
    elevation maps can be produced.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com