Title :
Impacts of Ionospheric Scintillation on the BIOMASS P-Band Satellite SAR
Author :
Rogers, Neil C. ; Quegan, S. ; Jun Su Kim ; Papathanassiou, Konstantinos P.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Math. & Stat., Univ. of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
Abstract :
The European Space Agency is conducting studies for a low-earth orbiting polarimetric synthetic aperture radar called BIOMASS to provide global measurements of forest biomass and tree height. Phase scintillation across the synthetic aperture caused by ionospheric irregularities can degrade the impulse response function (IRF) and cause squinting, and its temporal variation can cause decorrelation in repeat-pass interferometry. These effects are simulated for a range of conditions for the baseline BIOMASS system configuration using the Wideband model of scintillation, which predicts that for a dawn-dusk orbit, impacts of scintillation over forest regions are negligible under all conditions except at high latitudes in the North American sector under high sunspot activity. In this sector, single-look IRFs have mean integrated sidelobe ratios (ISLRs) and peak sidelobe ratios (PSLRs) better than 0 and -5 dB, respectively, at 90% confidence interval under median solar activity up to the northern tree line ( ~ 70° geomagnetic). Degradation in the mean 3-dB resolution of up to 10% is predicted, with mean absolute azimuth shifts of the IRF peak of up to 2 m, which increases to 5 m at high sunspot number. Similar values are found for the dawn and dusk sides, and seasonal variations are negligible for latitudes below the tree line. Repeat-pass interferometric image pairs maintain coherence up to 50 ° N under median sunspot conditions. Four-look processing improves the ISLR and PSLR by several decibels, but causes significant degradation of the 3-dB resolution due to incoherent averaging of images with different random azimuth shifts.
Keywords :
radar polarimetry; radiowave propagation; remote sensing by radar; sunspots; synthetic aperture radar; vegetation; vegetation mapping; 3-dB resolution degradation; BIOMASS P-band satellite SAR; European Space Agency; IRF; ISLR; North American sector; PSLR; baseline BIOMASS system configuration; condition range simulation effects; confidence interval; dawn side; dawn-dusk orbit; dusk side; forest regions; four-look processing; geomagnetic; global forest biomass measurement; global tree height measurement; high latitudes; high sunspot activity; high sunspot number; impulse response function degradation; incoherent image averaging; ionospheric irregularities; ionospheric scintillation impacts; low-earth orbiting polarimetric synthetic aperture radar; mean absolute azimuth shifts; mean integrated sidelobe ratios; median solar activity; median sunspot conditions; northern tree line; peak sidelobe ratios; phase scintillation; random azimuth shifts; repeat-pass interferometric image pairs; repeat-pass interferometry decorrelation; seasonal variations; single-look IRF peak; temporal variation; wideband scintillation model; Ionosphere; radio propagation; spaceborne radar; synthetic aperture radar (SAR);
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2013.2255880