DocumentCode
944979
Title
Bistatic Radar Imaging of the Marine Environment—Part II: Simulation and Results Analysis
Author
Arnold-Bos, Andreas ; Khenchaf, Ali ; Martin, Arnaud
Author_Institution
Ecole Nat. Superieure des Ing. des Etudes et Techniques de l´´Armement, Brest
Volume
45
Issue
11
fYear
2007
Firstpage
3384
Lastpage
3396
Abstract
We present a bistatic, polarimetric, and real aperture marine radar simulator (MaRS) producing pseudoraw radar signals. The simulation takes the main elements of the environment into account (sea temperature, salinity, and wind speed). Realistic sea surfaces are generated using a two-scale model on a semideterministic basis to incorporate the presence of ship wakes. Then, the radar acquisition chain (antennas, modulation, and polarization) is modeled, as well as the movements of the sensors, on which uncertainties can be introduced, and ship wakes. The pseudoraw temporal signals delivered by MaRS are further processed using, for instance, bistatic synthetic aperture beamforming. The scene itself represents the sea surface as well as ship wakes. The main points covered here are the scene discretization, the ship wake modeling, and the computational cost aspects. We also present images simulated in various monostatic and bistatic configurations and discuss the results. This paper follows its companion paper, where much of the theory used here is recalled and developed in detail. a bistatic, polarimetric, and real aperture marine radar simulator (MaRS) producing pseudoraw radar signals. The simulation takes the main elements of the environment into account (sea temperature, salinity, and wind speed). Realistic sea surfaces are generated using a two-scale model on a semideterministic basis to incorporate the presence of ship wakes. Then, the radar acquisition chain (antennas, modulation, and polarization) is modeled, as well as the movements of the sensors, on which uncertainties can be introduced, and ship wakes. The pseudoraw temporal signals delivered by MaRS are further processed using, for instance, bistatic synthetic aperture beamforming. The scene itself represents the sea surface as well as ship wakes. The main points covered here are the scene discretization, the ship wake modeling, and the computational cost aspects. We also present images simulated in various- - monostatic and bistatic configurations and discuss the results. This paper follows its companion paper, where much of the theory used here is recalled and developed in detail.
Keywords
geophysical signal processing; marine radar; ocean temperature; radar imaging; radar polarimetry; wakes; wind; MaRS; antennas; bistatic radar imaging; bistatic synthetic aperture beamforming; marine environment; modulation; monostatic configurations; polarimetric real aperture marine radar simulator; polarization; pseudoraw radar signals; radar acquisition chain; salinity; sea surfaces; sea temperature; sensors movement; ship wake modeling; two-scale model; wind speed; Bistatic radar; bistatic scattering; marine surveillance systems; radar simulation; synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0196-2892
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TGRS.2007.899812
Filename
4358859
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