DocumentCode :
1123782
Title :
Hard Limiting in Synthetic Aperture Signal Processing
Author :
Steinberg, Bernard D.
Author_Institution :
University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. 19174
Issue :
4
fYear :
1975
fDate :
7/1/1975 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
556
Lastpage :
561
Abstract :
In synthetic aperture radar a large linear phased array is formed from the rapid movement of a single element through each position in the array. Storage and coherent combining of the successive radar echoes are central to the array-forming process. Optical processing is the most common technique because of the efficiency with which Fourier transformation may be accomplished with simple optics. Real-time operation, however, requires all-electronic processing, which is difficult to accomplish because of the huge quantity of data to be manipulated. Dynamic range compression by hard limiting may ease the problem by reducing the number of bits per frame. The effects of hard limiting are analyzed in this paper. It is shown that large targets simultaneously illuminated by the radar antenna will produce image targets or ghosts displaced in angle. Statistically homogeneous clutter will "linearize" the hard-limited receiver and suppress the ghosts without loss in contrast, as does thermal noise if it is larger than the target echoes. Pulse compression reduces the probability of images from prominent targets. Judicious choice of the pulse-compression waveform is a powerful tool for destroying coherent buildup of images from all large targets not in the same range resolution cell. Linear FM, the most common choice, unfortunately does not exhibit this desirable property.
Keywords :
Adaptive optics; Array signal processing; Limiting; Optical pulse compression; Optical receivers; Optical signal processing; Phased arrays; Radar antennas; Radar signal processing; Signal processing;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Aerospace and Electronic Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9251
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TAES.1975.308120
Filename :
4101451
Link To Document :
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