Title :
How digital correlation affects the fringe washing function in L-band aperture synthesis radiometry
Author :
Fischman, Mark A. ; England, Anthony W. ; Ruf, Christopher S.
Author_Institution :
Radiat. Lab., Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI, USA
fDate :
3/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The phase coherence limitations of L-band digital correlation radiometry are investigated for receiver architectures that use low A/D converter resolution (1-3 bits). Statistical models and measurements of a 1.4 GHz digital radiometer system show that coarse quantization can cause excess fringe washing losses which degrade the spatial resolution capabilities in synthetic thinned array radiometry (STAR) implementations. For single-bit STAR, excess fringe washing is discernible immediately away from the boresight direction and, further from the center of the image, can result in as much as 2 dB loss in visibility information. To accommodate low-bit correlators in remote sensing STAR, a novel band division correlation (BDC) processor is proposed. BDC improves the time-coherence of each correlated brightness signal while it also maintains the system bandwidth and noise-equivalent sensitivity of a conventional STAR radiometer. Analytical and numerical solutions are presented for the point spread function of a 27 m L-band STAR sensor to evaluate the band-slicing technique. The results show that with 4 subband channels, BDC improves swath edge resolution from 17.0 to 10.2 km and reduces correlation loss from 2.5 to 0.2 dB
Keywords :
geophysical techniques; hydrological techniques; oceanographic techniques; radiometry; remote sensing; terrain mapping; 0.39 to 1.55 GHz; L-band; STAR; UHF; aperture synthesis radiometry; coarse quantization; digital correlation; digital radiometer; fringe washing function; geophysical measurement technique; hydrology; land surface; low A/D converter resolution; microwave radiometry; ocean; phase coherence limitations; remote sensing; salinity; soil moisture; synthetic thinned array radiometry; terrain mapping; Brightness; Coherence; Correlators; Degradation; L-band; Loss measurement; Quantization; Radiometry; Remote sensing; Spatial resolution;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2002.1000326