4.7 Article

Processing Techniques for Nadir Echo Suppression in Staggered Synthetic Aperture Radar

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/LGRS.2022.3157445

Keywords

Synthetic aperture radar; Azimuth; Blanking; Backscatter; Radar imaging; Image coding; Spaceborne radar; High-resolution wide-swath (HRWS) imaging; multiple-elevation-beam synthetic aperture radar (SAR); nadir echo; NASA-ISRO SAR (NISAR); SAR; staggered SAR; Tandem-L

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Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is a high-resolution imaging radar used in satellite remote sensing, with staggered SAR being a novel mode of operation under consideration for future SAR missions. Proposed processing techniques aim to mitigate the impact of nadir echoes in staggered SAR images and recover useful signals through interpolation, leading to improved image quality at a reasonable additional computational cost.
Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is a class of high-resolution imaging radar particularly suitable for satellite remote sensing with diverse applications, such as biomass and ice monitoring, generation of digital elevation models, and measuring of subsidence. Staggered SAR is a novel mode of operation under consideration for the next-generation SAR missions such as Tandem-L and NASA-ISRO SAR. It uses digital beamforming and a continuous variation of the pulse repetition interval (PRI) to achieve high azimuth resolution over a much wider, continuous swath than is traditionally possible. This PRI variation renders infeasible use of existing methods to avoid nadir echoes, which might impair the quality of staggered SAR images. This work proposes processing techniques that mitigate the impact of nadir echoes in staggered SAR through localization and thresholding-and-blanking of these echoes in range-compressed data and recovery of part of the underlying useful signal through interpolation. The performance of these processing techniques is evaluated through simulations using real TerraSAR-X data. The proposed technique can be implemented as an optional stage in the processing chain of future staggered SAR missions and leads to improved image quality at a reasonable additional computational cost.

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