TY - JOUR
T1 - The First Helicopter Platform-Based Equivalent GEO SAR Experiment with Long Integration Time
AU - Zhang, Tianyi
AU - Ding, Zegang
AU - Zhang, Qingjun
AU - Zhao, Bingji
AU - Zhu, Kaiwen
AU - Li, Linghao
AU - Gao, Yongpeng
AU - Dai, Chao
AU - Tang, Zhihua
AU - Long, Teng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1980-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2020/12
Y1 - 2020/12
N2 - Geosynchronous synthetic aperture radar (GEO SAR)-related technologies are being mature, and the first GEO SAR satellite is expected to launch in the next ten years. Under this circumstance, some equivalent experiments should be conducted at the current stage to validate some key characteristics or parameters, which could significantly increase the success possibility of the GEO SAR project. To validate the feasibility of GEO SAR imaging with long integration time, which is the most important and fundamental characteristic of GEO SAR, the first helicopter platform-based equivalent GEO SAR experiment with long integration time was performed in Qianxi County of China on May 22, 2019. The integration time of it is 80 s, which is carefully designed to maintain the consistence between itself and the integration time of the GEO SAR. Furthermore, the azimuth signal-to-noise ratio gain with long synthetic aperture time is analyzed. Moreover, the 2-D space-variant motion error introduced by the complex helicopter trajectory and the performances of different imaging algorithms are analyzed to choose the proper imaging algorithms; to overcome the flaws and unclarities of existing algorithms, some improvements are proposed to obtain the well-focused SAR image. What is more, the equivalence of this experiment is also analyzed detailedly to demonstrate the effectiveness of this experiment. At last, the imaging result with synthetic aperture time of 100 s and the comparison between itself and the optic photograph validate the success of this equivalent experiment and the feasibility of GEO SAR imaging with long integration time.
AB - Geosynchronous synthetic aperture radar (GEO SAR)-related technologies are being mature, and the first GEO SAR satellite is expected to launch in the next ten years. Under this circumstance, some equivalent experiments should be conducted at the current stage to validate some key characteristics or parameters, which could significantly increase the success possibility of the GEO SAR project. To validate the feasibility of GEO SAR imaging with long integration time, which is the most important and fundamental characteristic of GEO SAR, the first helicopter platform-based equivalent GEO SAR experiment with long integration time was performed in Qianxi County of China on May 22, 2019. The integration time of it is 80 s, which is carefully designed to maintain the consistence between itself and the integration time of the GEO SAR. Furthermore, the azimuth signal-to-noise ratio gain with long synthetic aperture time is analyzed. Moreover, the 2-D space-variant motion error introduced by the complex helicopter trajectory and the performances of different imaging algorithms are analyzed to choose the proper imaging algorithms; to overcome the flaws and unclarities of existing algorithms, some improvements are proposed to obtain the well-focused SAR image. What is more, the equivalence of this experiment is also analyzed detailedly to demonstrate the effectiveness of this experiment. At last, the imaging result with synthetic aperture time of 100 s and the comparison between itself and the optic photograph validate the success of this equivalent experiment and the feasibility of GEO SAR imaging with long integration time.
KW - Equivalent experiment
KW - geosynchronous synthetic aperture radar (GEO SAR)
KW - helicopter platform
KW - long integration time
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85097349568&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TGRS.2020.2988446
DO - 10.1109/TGRS.2020.2988446
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85097349568
SN - 0196-2892
VL - 58
SP - 8518
EP - 8530
JO - IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing
JF - IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing
IS - 12
M1 - 9084261
ER -