Title :
Ionospheric Polarimetric Dispersion Effect on Low-Frequency Spaceborne SAR Imaging
Author :
Li Li ; Yongsheng Zhang ; Zhen Dong ; Diannong Liang
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electron. Sci. & Eng., Nat. Univ. of Defense Technol., Changsha, China
Abstract :
Ionospheric Faraday rotation (FR) introduces polarimetric distortion to trans-ionosphere signals. Spaceborne low-frequency wide-bandwidth synthetic aperture radar (SAR) signals may be distorted by FR effect because it is highly dispersive. Ionospheric polarimetric dispersion (PD) effects on spaceborne SAR imaging are modeled and analyzed. PD effect is included in polarimetric SAR system impulse response matrices. In particular, PD effects on linearly polarized and circularly polarized SAR systems are analyzed by system impulse response matrices. Theoretically, PD will introduce amplitude modulation to SAR spectrums and hence distort linearly polarized SAR imaging; for circularly polarized systems, it introduces relative image shift and phase errors between images of different channels. Numerical evaluations and simulations show that PD effects will introduce noticeable effects on future P-band wide-bandwidth SAR systems.
Keywords :
Faraday effect; geophysical techniques; ionospheric electromagnetic wave propagation; matrix algebra; radar imaging; radar polarimetry; radiowave propagation; remote sensing by radar; spaceborne radar; synthetic aperture radar; transient response; P-band wide-bandwidth SAR systems; SAR signal distortion; SAR spectrum; amplitude modulation; circularly polarized SAR systems; image shift; ionospheric Faraday rotation; ionospheric polarimetric dispersion effect; linearly polarized SAR systems; low-frequency spaceborne SAR imaging; phase errors; polarimetric SAR system impulse response matrices; polarimetric distortion; spaceborne low-frequency wide-bandwidth synthetic aperture radar signals; trans-ionosphere signals; Degradation; Dispersion; Imaging; Radar polarimetry; Remote sensing; Spaceborne radar; Synthetic aperture radar; Ionosphere; polarimetric dispersion (PD); synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imaging;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/LGRS.2014.2323232