• DocumentCode
    109736
  • Title

    Ground-Based Array for Tomographic Imaging of the Tropical Forest in P-Band

  • Author

    Ho Tong Minh Dinh ; Tebaldini, Stefano ; Rocca, Fabio ; Koleck, T. ; Borderies, P. ; Albinet, C. ; Villard, Ludovic ; Hamadi, Alia ; Thuy Le Toan

  • Author_Institution
    Dipt. di Elettron. e Inf., Politec. di Milano, Milan, Italy
  • Volume
    51
  • Issue
    8
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    Aug. 2013
  • Firstpage
    4460
  • Lastpage
    4472
  • Abstract
    In this paper we discuss the design concepts and preliminary results relating to the European Space Agency´s ground-based campaign TropiScat, whose main goal is to evaluate temporal coherence at P-band in a tropical forest in quad-polarization, considering temporal lags ranging from hours to months and at different heights within the vegetation layer. The experiment has been successfully set up and operated since October 2011 at the Paracou field station, French Guiana, where the equipment was installed on top of the 55-m high Guyaflux Tower to illuminate the forest below. The system consists of a vector network analyzer connected to 20 antennas through a switchbox, which allows the use of any of them either as a transmitter or as a receiver. Vertical imaging and fully polarimetric capabilities are achieved by operating the 20 antennas in a multistatic fashion, resulting in an equivalent monostatic array consisting of 15 phase centers displaced along the vertical direction in each polarization. Such a design allows unambiguous imaging of the vegetation while yielding a minimum distance between nearby antennas on the order of 0.8 m, so as to minimize coupling effects. The equipment allows the gathering of signals with the tomographic array within a few minutes, resulting in the possibility to produce a tomographic image of the forest with a temporal sampling of 15 min. System calibration and validation was performed by employing a 2-m trihedral reflector and a rotating dihedral reflector. This allowed the evaluation of the system pulse response in all polarizations and also assessment of the extent of tower motions. As a result, tomographic images have been generated from 500 (P-band) to 900 MHz in all polarizations. Results from real data acquired in Fall 2011 confirm the feasibility of carrying out reliable coherence measurements for the whole duration of the campaign.
  • Keywords
    UHF antennas; antenna arrays; calibration; geophysical image processing; radar imaging; vegetation; vegetation mapping; European Space Agency ground-based campaign TropiScat; French Guiana; P-band; Paracou field station; antennas; coupling effects; design concepts; equivalent monostatic array; frequency 500 MHz to 900 MHz; fully polarimetric capabilities; ground-based array; high Guyaflux Tower; phase centers; quadpolarization; real data; receiver; reliable coherence measurements; rotating dihedral reflector; switchbox; system calibration; system pulse response; system validation; temporal coherence; temporal lags; temporal sampling; tomographic array; tomographic image; tomographic images; tomographic imaging; tower motions; transmitter; trihedral reflector; tropical forest; vector network analyzer; vegetation layer; vertical direction; vertical imaging; Arrays; Azimuth; Coherence; Poles and towers; Tomography; Transmitting antennas; Array design; BIOMASS mission; P-band forest tomography; TropiScat tomography mode; forest vertical structure; ground based radar; multistatic processing; virtual array;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0196-2892
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TGRS.2013.2246795
  • Filename
    6488812