Indoor Experiments of Bistatic/Multistatic GB-SAR with One-Stationary and One-Moving Antennae

Ground-based synthetic aperture radar (GB-SAR) is a useful tool to simulate advanced SAR systems with its flexibility on RF system and SAR configuration. This paper reports an indoor experiment of bistatic/multistatic GB-SAR operated in Ku-band with two antennae: one antenna was stationary on the gr...

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Main Authors: Hoonyol Lee, Jihyun Moon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-09-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/18/3733
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spelling doaj-d2b6c20eb11041e382d4c38faed148b92021-09-26T01:18:45ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922021-09-01133733373310.3390/rs13183733Indoor Experiments of Bistatic/Multistatic GB-SAR with One-Stationary and One-Moving AntennaeHoonyol Lee0Jihyun Moon1Department of Geophysics, Kangwon National University, Chuncheon 24341, KoreaDepartment of Geophysics, Kangwon National University, Chuncheon 24341, KoreaGround-based synthetic aperture radar (GB-SAR) is a useful tool to simulate advanced SAR systems with its flexibility on RF system and SAR configuration. This paper reports an indoor experiment of bistatic/multistatic GB-SAR operated in Ku-band with two antennae: one antenna was stationary on the ground and the other was moving along a linear rail. Multiple bistatic GB-SAR images were taken with various stationary antenna positions, and then averaged to simulate a multistatic GB-SAR configuration composed of a moving Tx antenna along a rail and multiple stationary Rx antennae with various viewing angles. This configuration simulates the use of a spaceborne/airborne SAR system as a transmitting antenna and multiple ground-based stationary antennae as receiving antennae to obtain omni-directional scattering images. This SAR geometry with one-stationary and one-moving antennae configuration was analyzed and a time-domain SAR focusing algorithm was adjusted to this geometry. Being stationary for one antenna, the Doppler rate was analyzed to be half of the monostatic case, and the azimuth resolution was doubled. Image quality was enhanced by identifying and reducing azimuth ambiguity. By averaging multiple bistatic images from various stationary antenna positions, a multistatic GB-SAR image was achieved to have better image swath and reduced speckle noise.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/18/3733bistaticmultistaticGB-SARKu-bandstationary antennamoving antenna
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hoonyol Lee
Jihyun Moon
spellingShingle Hoonyol Lee
Jihyun Moon
Indoor Experiments of Bistatic/Multistatic GB-SAR with One-Stationary and One-Moving Antennae
Remote Sensing
bistatic
multistatic
GB-SAR
Ku-band
stationary antenna
moving antenna
author_facet Hoonyol Lee
Jihyun Moon
author_sort Hoonyol Lee
title Indoor Experiments of Bistatic/Multistatic GB-SAR with One-Stationary and One-Moving Antennae
title_short Indoor Experiments of Bistatic/Multistatic GB-SAR with One-Stationary and One-Moving Antennae
title_full Indoor Experiments of Bistatic/Multistatic GB-SAR with One-Stationary and One-Moving Antennae
title_fullStr Indoor Experiments of Bistatic/Multistatic GB-SAR with One-Stationary and One-Moving Antennae
title_full_unstemmed Indoor Experiments of Bistatic/Multistatic GB-SAR with One-Stationary and One-Moving Antennae
title_sort indoor experiments of bistatic/multistatic gb-sar with one-stationary and one-moving antennae
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Ground-based synthetic aperture radar (GB-SAR) is a useful tool to simulate advanced SAR systems with its flexibility on RF system and SAR configuration. This paper reports an indoor experiment of bistatic/multistatic GB-SAR operated in Ku-band with two antennae: one antenna was stationary on the ground and the other was moving along a linear rail. Multiple bistatic GB-SAR images were taken with various stationary antenna positions, and then averaged to simulate a multistatic GB-SAR configuration composed of a moving Tx antenna along a rail and multiple stationary Rx antennae with various viewing angles. This configuration simulates the use of a spaceborne/airborne SAR system as a transmitting antenna and multiple ground-based stationary antennae as receiving antennae to obtain omni-directional scattering images. This SAR geometry with one-stationary and one-moving antennae configuration was analyzed and a time-domain SAR focusing algorithm was adjusted to this geometry. Being stationary for one antenna, the Doppler rate was analyzed to be half of the monostatic case, and the azimuth resolution was doubled. Image quality was enhanced by identifying and reducing azimuth ambiguity. By averaging multiple bistatic images from various stationary antenna positions, a multistatic GB-SAR image was achieved to have better image swath and reduced speckle noise.
topic bistatic
multistatic
GB-SAR
Ku-band
stationary antenna
moving antenna
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/18/3733
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