Title :
Precise topography- and aperture-dependent motion compensation for airborne SAR
Author :
De Macedo, Karlus A Câmara ; Scheiber, Rolf
Author_Institution :
German Aerosp. Center, Microwaves & Radar Inst., Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany
fDate :
4/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Efficient synthetic aperture radar (SAR) processing algorithms are unable to exactly implement the aperture- and topography-dependent motion compensation due to the superposition of the synthetic apertures of several targets having different motion errors and potentially different topographic heights. Thus, during motion compensation, a reference level is assumed, resulting in residual phase errors that impact the focusing, geometric fidelity, and phase accuracy of the processed SAR images. This letter proposes a new short fast Fourier transform-based postprocessing methodology capable of efficient and precise compensation of these topography- and aperture-dependent residual phase errors. In addition to wide beamwidth (very high resolution) SAR systems, airborne repeat-pass interferometry especially benefits from this approach, as motion compensation can be significantly improved, especially in areas with high topographic changes. Repeat-pass interferometric data of the E-SAR system of the German Aerospace Center (DLR) are used to demonstrate the performance of the proposed approach.
Keywords :
fast Fourier transforms; motion compensation; radar imaging; radiowave interferometry; remote sensing by radar; synthetic aperture radar; D-InSAR; German Aerospace Center; SAR images; SAR processing algorithms; airborne SAR; airborne repeat-pass interferometry; differential interferometry; fast Fourier transform-based postprocessing methodology; geometric fidelity; motion compensation; motion errors; phase accuracy; residual phase errors; synthetic aperture radar; topographic heights; topography; wide beamwidth; Azimuth; Data processing; Focusing; Interferometry; Layout; Motion compensation; Radar tracking; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Surfaces; Synthetic aperture radar; Airborne; differential interferomertry (D-InSAR); interferometry; motion errors; synthetic aperture radar (SAR); topography; wide beamwidth;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/LGRS.2004.842465