Title :
An analysis of a rotating, range-gated, fanbeam spaceborne scatterometer concept
Author :
Lin, Chung-Chi ; Rommen, Björn ; Wilson, J.J.W. ; Impagnatiello, F. ; Park, Peter S.
Author_Institution :
Eur. Space Agency, Noordwijk, Netherlands
fDate :
9/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A new simple scatterometer concept combines the advantages of both the fixed, multiple beam, sidelooking radar such as AMI-Wind (ERS-1/2) and NSCAT (ADEOS), and the conically scanning pencil-beam radar such as SeaWinds. A wide, fanbeam antenna is rotated around a vertical axis with a slow rotation rate. For a satellite at an altitude of 725 km, the antenna footprint sweeps a circular donut of 1500 km diameter. Such a slow conical scan combined with the motion of the satellite at ≈7 km/s ground speed results in highly overlapping successive sweeps such that an image pixel is revisited up to 10-11 times during an overpass. The pixels in the radial direction are resolved by range-gating the radar echo. Depending on the across-track position of the imaged pixel, the measurement acquisitions during an overpass consist of a set of σ° at different combinations of the azimuth and incident angles. A preliminary optimization of the system resulted in a C-band radar concept with a 15 km multiple-look spatial resolution and global coverage in two days. A sketch of the developed concept, preliminary system design, and predicted performance are described
Keywords :
geophysical equipment; radar antennas; radar imaging; remote sensing by radar; satellite antennas; spaceborne radar; C-band radar; across-track position; antenna footprint; azimuth; image pixel; incident angles; optimization; overlapping successive sweeps; performance; radar echo; range-gating; rotating range-gated fanbeam spaceborne scatterometer concept; slow conical scan; system design; wide fanbeam antenna; Azimuth; Pixel; Position measurement; Radar antennas; Radar imaging; Radar measurements; Radar scattering; Satellite antennas; Spaceborne radar; Spatial resolution;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on