Title :
Spotlight-mode synthetic aperture radar processing for high-resolution lunar mapping
Author :
Harcke, Leif ; Weintraub, Lawrence ; Yun, Sang-Ho ; Dickinson, Richard ; Gurrola, Eric ; Hensley, Scott ; Marechal, Nicholas
Author_Institution :
Jet Propulsion Lab., Pasadena, CA, USA
Abstract :
During the 2008-2009 year, the Goldstone Solar System Radar was upgraded to support radar mapping of the lunar poles at 4 m resolution. The finer resolution of the new system and the accompanying migration through resolution cells called for spotlight, rather than delay-Doppler, imaging techniques. A new pre-processing system supports fast-time Doppler removal and motion compensation to a point. Two spotlight imaging techniques which compensate for phase errors due to (i) out of focus-plane motion of the radar and (ii) local topography, have been implemented and tested. One is based on the polar format algorithm followed by a unique autofocus technique, the other is a full bistatic time-domain backprojection technique. The processing system yields imagery of the specified resolution. Products enabled by this new system include topographic mapping through radar interferometry, and change detection techniques (amplitude and coherent change) for geolocation of the NASA LCROSS mission impact site.
Keywords :
geophysical equipment; radar interferometry; remote sensing by radar; synthetic aperture radar; AD 2008 to 2009; Goldstone Solar System Radar; NASA LCROSS mission impact site; autofocus technique; bistatic time-domain backprojection technique; change detection techniques; fast-time Doppler removal; focus-plane motion; geolocation; high-resolution lunar mapping; local topography; lunar poles; phase errors; polar format algorithm; preprocessing system; radar interferometry; radar mapping; resolution cells; spotlight imaging techniques; spotlight-mode synthetic aperture radar processing; topographic mapping; Delay; Doppler radar; Focusing; High-resolution imaging; Image resolution; Moon; Motion compensation; Radar imaging; Solar system; Surfaces;
Conference_Titel :
Radar Conference, 2010 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Washington, DC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5811-0
DOI :
10.1109/RADAR.2010.5494426