Title :
X-band low-grazing-angle ocean backscatter obtained during LOGAN 1993
Author :
Rino, Charles L. ; Eckert, Eric ; Siegel, Alan ; Webster, Timothy ; Ochadlick, Andy ; Rankin, Mike ; Davis, Jon
Author_Institution :
Vista Res. Inc., Mountain View, CA, USA
fDate :
1/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper reviews X-band ocean microwave backscatter data from the LOGAN (LOw Grazing ANgle) experiment conducted on the Chesapeake Light Tower by the Naval Air Warfare Center. The data were collected under varied wind, sea, and swell conditions that provide some new insights into low-grazing-angle backscatter phenomena. Transient backscatter peaks called “sea spikes” have long been associated with deep-water breaking waves; however, they have yet to be fully reconciled with backscatter and hydrodynamic theories. New analysis techniques have been applied to the LOGAN data that take advantage of the unique characteristics of sea spikes and their dynamics. High-resolution Doppler spectra are organized relative to the space-time centroids of the sea-spike clusters and conditionally averaged by RCS strength. The mean Doppler variation of the strongest sea spikes then map the breaking-wave structure just as Doppler histories measured at moderate grazing angles map the dynamics of the dominant linear surface-wave components. While breaking waves are manifest to some degree in backscatter data at all grazing angles, a non-Bragg-scatter mechanism accentuates the crest scattering at low grazing angles. The phenomena potentially can be exploited for remote ocean sensing and imaging
Keywords :
Doppler radar; backscatter; microwave imaging; ocean waves; oceanographic techniques; radar imaging; transients; Chesapeake Light Tower; Doppler spectra; LOGAN 1993; Naval Air Warfare Center; RCS strength; X-band low-grazing-angle ocean backscatter; breaking-wave structure; crest scattering; deep-water breaking waves; low-grazing-angle backscatter; microwave backscatter data; non-Bragg-scatter mechanism; ocean imaging; radar backscatter; remote ocean sensing; sea; sea-spike clusters; space-time centroids; swell conditions; transient backscatter peaks; wind; Backscatter; Doppler radar; Hydrodynamics; Light scattering; Oceans; Polarization; Radar cross section; Radar scattering; Sea measurements; Sea surface;
Journal_Title :
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of