DocumentCode :
944890
Title :
Hybrid-Polarity SAR Architecture
Author :
Raney, R. Keith
Author_Institution :
Johns Hopkins Univ., Laurel
Volume :
45
Issue :
11
fYear :
2007
Firstpage :
3397
Lastpage :
3404
Abstract :
A synthetic aperture radar (SAR) often is constrained to transmit only one polarization. Within this constraint, two aggressive measurement objectives are 1) full characterization and exploitation of the backscattered field, and 2) invariance to geometrical orientations of features in the scene. Full characterization implies coherent dual-polarization to support the four Stokes parameters. These are rotationally invariant with respect backscatterer orientation if and only if the transmission is circularly polarized. Given that the data products are the Stokes parameters, the receivers can use any orthogonal polarization basis. A SAR in hybrid-polarity architecture (CL-pol) transmits circular polarization and receives two orthogonal mutually coherent linear polarizations, which is one manifestation of compact polarimetry. The resulting radar is relatively simple to implement, and has unique self-calibration features and low susceptibility to noise and cross-channel errors. It is the architecture of choice for two lunar radars scheduled for launch in 2008. Data from a CL-pol SAR yield to decomposition strategies such as the m-delta method introduced in this paper.
Keywords :
backscatter; polarisation; radar polarimetry; spaceborne radar; synthetic aperture radar; CL-pol SAR; Stokes parameters; backscattered field; circular polarization; dual polarization; hybrid-polarity SAR architecture; lunar radars; m-delta method; orthogonal polarization basis; polarization transmission; synthetic aperture radar; Calibration; circular polarization; compact polarimetry; decomposition; synthetic aperture radar (SAR);
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0196-2892
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2007.895883
Filename :
4358849
Link To Document :
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