• Title of article

    Development of a retrodirective PARC for ALOS/PALSAR calibration

  • Author/Authors

    M.، Fujita, نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    -2176
  • From page
    2177
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    Polarimetric radar calibration is a procedure that corrects the polarization distortion of a measured scattering matrix by referring to the scattering matrix of a known target. The present paper describes the principle, design, manufacture and measurement results of a novel retrodirective polarimetric active radar calibrator (PARC). It accommodates both the depolarization characteristic by using dual-polarized antennas and retrodirectivity with the Van Atta array concept simultaneously. The PARC was designed for Phased Array L-band SAR (PALSAR) calibration based on the proposed principle. It consists of a 6 *6-element antenna array with a 1-m-square aperture and four amplifiers with a 20-dB gain. The whole array is divided into four 3*3-element subarrays to form a two-dimensional (2-D) Van Atta array. Retrodirectivity extends the angular width, where the radar cross section exceeds 35 dBm/sup 2/, which is a preliminary design goal, to almost twice the width of a conventional array reflector of the same size. However, it should be noted that the present design needs at least four times as many amplifiers as a conventional fixed-beam array reflector to be capable of 2-D source tracking. A prototype model of the present retrodirective PARC is manufactured in the L-band to allow Advanced Land-Observation Satellite (ALOS)/PALSAR calibration. The results we obtained through measurement agree well with the theoretical predictions, and substantiate the premise behind the present design of the retrodirective PARC for polarimetric SAR calibration.
  • Keywords
    BRDF normalization , image processing , Remote sensing
  • Journal title
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING
  • Record number

    100290