Title :
A Numerical Study of the Retrieval of Sea Surface Height Profiles From Low Grazing Angle Radar Data
Author :
Johnson, Joel T. ; Burkholder, Robert J. ; Toporkov, Jakov V. ; Lyzenga, David R. ; Plant, William J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Ohio State Univ., Columbus, OH
fDate :
6/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A numerical study of the retrieval of sea surface height profiles from low grazing angle radar observations is described. The study is based on a numerical method for electromagnetic scattering from 1-D rough sea profiles, combined with the ldquoimproved linear representationrdquo of Creamer for simulating weakly nonlinear sea surface hydrodynamics. Numerical computations are performed for frequencies from 2975 to 3025 MHz so that simulated radar pulse returns are achieved. The geometry utilized models a radar with an antenna height of 14 m, observing the sea surface at ranges from 520 to 1720 m. The low grazing angles of this configuration produce significant shadowing of the sea surface, and standard analytical theories of sea scattering are not directly applicable. Three approaches for retrieving sea height profile information are compared. The first method uses a statistical relationship between the surface height and the computed radar cross sections versus range (an incoherent measurement). A second method uses the phase difference between scattering measurements in two vertically separated antennas (ldquovertical interferometry) in the retrieval. The final technique retrieves height profiles from variations in the apparent Doppler frequency (coherent measurements) versus range and requires that time-stepped simulations be performed. The relative advantages and disadvantages of each of the three approaches are examined and discussed.
Keywords :
Doppler radar; electromagnetic wave scattering; oceanographic techniques; radar antennas; radiowave propagation; remote sensing by radar; sea level; 1D rough sea profiles; altitude 14 m; apparent Doppler frequency variations; coherent measurements; distance 520 m to 1720 m; electromagnetic scattering; frequency 2975 MHz to 3025 MHz; low grazing angle radar data; numerical study; radar antenna; radar cross section; sea surface height profiles; sea surface height retrieval; simulated radar pulse returns; weakly nonlinear sea surface hydrodynamics; Ocean remote sensing; rough surfaces; sea surfaces;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2008.2006833