DocumentCode
3192422
Title
A near field spherical wave inverse synthetic aperture radar technique
Author
Broquetas, A. ; Jofre, L. ; Cardama, A.
Author_Institution
Dept. Teoria del Senyal i Comunicacions, ETSE Telecomunicacio, Barcelona, Spain
fYear
1992
fDate
18-25 June 1992
Firstpage
1114
Abstract
The authors present an imaging near-field spherical wave inverse synthetic aperture radar (SWISAR) algorithm based on a focusing operator of the scattered fields on the target surface. A spherical wave can be easily generated in an anechoic chamber using electrically small and low-cost horn antennas; no reflectors are used, avoiding surface tolerance problems, and diffraction can be minimized with an appropriate horn design. An additional advantage of this algorithm is its ability to account for bistatic measurement geometries and lateral tapers in the spherical wave illumination. A 2-D formulation has been used which is strictly valid for bodies which satisfy far-field conditions in the height dimension, as easily occurs with aircraft. The reconstruction of numerically simulated five point-like objects placed on a radial line for a frequency range of 18 to 26 GHz and an angular scan of 360 degrees is shown.<>
Keywords
microwave imaging; synthetic aperture radar; 18 to 26 GHz; 2-D formulation; ISAR imaging; bistatic measurement geometries; focusing operator; inverse synthetic aperture radar; lateral tapers; near field; point-like objects; radar imaging; spherical wave; target surface; Anechoic chambers; Antenna measurements; Diffraction; Geometry; Horn antennas; Inverse synthetic aperture radar; Lighting; Radar scattering; Reflector antennas; Surface waves;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium, 1992. AP-S. 1992 Digest. Held in Conjuction with: URSI Radio Science Meeting and Nuclear EMP Meeting., IEEE
Conference_Location
Chicago, IL, USA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-0730-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/APS.1992.221575
Filename
221575
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