1. Introduction
Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is a fast-developing tool for Earth observation in use for the last 40 years [
1,
2]. Because of its outstanding advantages of all-weather and all-day observation of the Earth, it has been widely used in military reconnaissance, land resources surveys, disaster monitoring, ocean monitoring and yield estimation of crops, surveying and mapping and so on [
3,
4,
5]. In recent years, bistatic SAR (BiSAR) systems have attracted more and more interest as they have various unique features, which are characterized by the different locations of the transmitter and receiver, flexible baseline configurations, costs saving using existing systems as a source of opportunity with several receive-only systems and the possibility to generate highly accurate digital elevation models (DEM) using bistatic interferometry [
6,
7,
8,
9]. The BiSAR stripmap mode is shown in
Figure 1, which can be used for generating a DEM of the Earth’s surface. In this mode, the primary satellite transmits the radar signal to the ground, and then the echoes are received by the primary satellite and the slave satellite.
However, the unique characteristics of BiSAR also add new challenges in technology implementation, such as measurement, control of the satellite platforms, the synchronization of the time, beam and phase, and BiSAR imaging formation algorithms and so on. Among these challenges, phase synchronization is one of the most critical factors for BiSAR interferometry [
10,
11,
12]. Phase synchronization can be realized by exchanging the synchronization signal between two platforms in BiSAR systems, as has been investigated in [
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22]. The pulse alternate synchronization scheme is proposed in and has been used for the TanDEM-X [
16,
18]. Each satellite in the TanDEM-X mission is equipped with six synchronization antennas used for transmitting and receiving the synchronization signal [
18,
19,
20]. The phase synchronization accuracy in the TanDEM-X mission is less than 1° [
20]. A linear frequency modulation (LFM) signal is used for exchanging. The LFM signal with the same carrier frequency as the transmitted radar signal is used for synchronization in order to simplify the system design. To date, the carrier frequency signal used for synchronization in BiSAR systems has not been demonstrated in the literature. In this paper, we investigate a pulsed signal at carrier frequency used for phase synchronization. From the test results, we can see that the synchronization scheme with the pulsed signal at carrier frequency has good performance. The test results of the synchronization scheme in the paper have guiding significance for the synchronization design of bistatic and multistatic SAR systems.
This paper is organized as follows. In
Section 2, the proposed pulsed signal phase synchronization scheme is introduced, including a pulsed synchronization signal exchange strategy and performance analysis. The performance verification of the phase synchronization is analyzed in
Section 3. In
Section 4, the validation experiment is conducted using the LuTan-1 ground test system. The performance of the proposed synchronization scheme is evaluated in
Section 4. Finally,
Section 5 concludes this paper with a short summary.
2. Pulsed Signal at Carrier Frequency Synchronization Implementation Scheme
In this section, the phase synchronization implementation scheme based on a pulsed signal at carrier frequency is established, which is later used as a basis for deriving quantitative estimates for the performance of the synchronization link.
2.1. Synchronization Scheme Description
In the BiSAR system, frequency deviation and phase noise of the radar carrier are the main factors that cause a phase synchronization error between the primary satellite and the slave satellite. In principle, phase synchronization can be achieved as long as the frequency difference and phase noise signal of the primary satellite and the slave satellite are obtained through the bidirectional transmission of the radar carrier, and the echo received by the slave satellite is compensated by it [
22]. In this paper, on the basis of the phase synchronization scheme proposed by Younis et al. [
15,
16] and applied to the TanDEM-X system with a bidirectional pair of phase synchronization pulses, an improved phase synchronization scheme was proposed for BiSAR satellites, which was based on a pulsed signal at carrier frequency as an uninterruptable bidirectional pair of synchronization pulses. The key points of the scheme are as follows:
The phase synchronization signal is exchanged by virtue of a time slot between radar signals; thus, the normal work of the BiSAR satellites can be prevented from being interrupted. Time diagrams of the synchronization pulse exchange are shown in
Figure 2.
The primary satellite and the slave satellite demodulate and collect the phase synchronization pulses received, respectively. In the data processing, the compensation phase is extracted by fast Fourier transform (FFT) operation of the pulsed signal, and the echo of the slave satellite is compensated by the compensation phase to complete the phase synchronization.
In the first pulse repetition time (PRT), the primary satellite transmits the synchronization signal to the slave satellite and the slave satellite receives the synchronization signal. Correspondingly, at the next PRT, the slave satellite transmits the synchronization signal to the primary satellite and the primary satellite receives the synchronization signal. The synchronization signal is at carrier frequency; therefore, the phase with a high signal-noise ratio (SNR) can be obtained at the frequency domain by fast Fourier transform (FFT) operation. The processing of the synchronization signal can be summarized as follows:
2.2. Synchronization Scheme Performance Analysis
The frequency of oscillator at the start of data take
is
, where
, which represents the primary satellite and slave satellite.
represents the nominal frequency,
is the carrier frequency and
denotes frequency offset [
23,
24,
25,
26]. The phases of two satellites at time are:
where
is the initial time-independent phase and
is the oscillator phase noise.
The demodulated phase
available at satellite
for a signal transmitted by satellite
. Thus, the demodulated phase
is available at the slave satellite for a signal transmitted by the primary satellite [
15,
16].
The output phase when the slave satellite transmits a synchronization pulse at
while the primary satellite receives at
, and the demodulated phase
is [
15,
16]:
The flow diagram for synchronization signal processing is shown in
Figure 3 and the compensation phase can be represented as [
15,
16]:
where
the frequency is offset between two oscillators,
is the Doppler frequency due to the relative velocity between the two satellites and
is residual phase, which includes the initial phase difference between two oscillators, oscillator noise phase error and hardware system phase error.
The time synchronization error can be up to 10
−8 s, so in a short time, it can be considered stable [
27,
28,
29]. As shown in
Figure 3, phase unwrapping starts the primary and secondary synchronization phases, and after phase unwrapping, interpolation is performed to obtain a synchronization phase consistent with the phase dimension of the echo and the compensation phase can be used to compensate the satellite data point-by-point.
2.3. Comparison between Pulsed Signal at Carrier Frequency and LFM Signal
Here, a comparison between a pulsed signal at carrier frequency and an LFM signal is given. The LFM signal
is written as follows:
where
is the rectangular function,
is the amplitude,
is the frequency modulation rate and
is the pulse width of the LFM signal.
is fast time, where k = 1,2,···,
and
is the sampling frequency. Suppose the bandwidth of the LFM signal
is
. In the receiving signal, suppose the average noise power is
and there are
samples. Therefore, the total noise power
of
samples can be expressed as
After matching filtering in the frequency domain, the LFM signal
is compressed. The peak power in the peak position can be written as
In addition, the total noise power after filtering can be expressed as
. The average noise power after filtering is
. Therefore, the SNR of the LFM signal after matching filtering is
Suppose the pulse signal at carrier frequency (after demodulation) is written as follows:
For the purpose of comparison, the signal
has the same amplitude
A and pulse width
as the LFM signal. After FFT operation, the peak power in the peak position can be expressed as follows:
The average noise power in the frequency domain can be written as
. Therefore, the SNR of the
is given by
It can be seen from Equations (8) and (11) that the SNRs of the LFM signal and pulse signal at carrier frequency are the same.
3. Pulsed Signal at Carrier Frequency Phase Synchronization Scheme Verification
In order to evaluate the performance of the pulsed signal at carrier frequency synchronization scheme, the test experiment based on the ground validation system of the LuTan-1 is performed. As mentioned above, the LFM signal is used for synchronization in the LuTan-1 mission. However, with some modification, the ground validation system of LuTan-1 can be used for demonstrating the pulsed signal at carrier frequency synchronization scheme. In this section, the hardware system is introduced. The test experiment is described in detail.
3.1. Synchronization Scheme Performance Analysis
The hardware structure diagram of the phase synchronization link is illustrated in
Figure 4. The system consists of a global navigation satellite system (GNSS) disciplined oscillator, a transmit channel, a receive channel and a synchronization antenna. The GNSS disciplined oscillator employs disciplined rubidium clocks to provide a time frequency signal for the reference frequency source module. The GNSS disciplined oscillator combines the excellent short-term stability characteristics of quartz crystal oscillators with the long-term stability characteristics of GPS signals [
25,
30]. In the previous test of the ground validation system of LuTan-1, an oscillator with 10
−7 accuracy was used and the experiments presented in the paper were conducted. However, when satellites are in orbit, a GNSS disciplined oscillator is used in the system and accuracy can reach 10
−11.
The purpose of extracting the compensated phase is to obtain the phase synchronization error caused by the frequency deviation of the primary and slave satellites and other phase noise. The other phases introduced in this process will become the interference phase that affects the phase synchronization performance. It can be seen from
Figure 4 that during the phase synchronization pulse transmission, the factors that cause the phase change include: primary satellite and slave satellite frequency offset
, the phase jitter of transmit and receive channels
and
and the phase jitter caused by receiver noise is
. The phase jitter caused by synchronization antenna is
and the phase jitter caused by the Doppler effect of relative motion of the primary satellite and slave satellite is
, where
represents the primary satellite and
represents the slave satellite.
The compensation phase interpolation can be represented as [
25]:
where
represents the difference in transmit/receive channel phase,
the influence of the phase of the antenna pattern and
denotes the difference of phase error caused by receiver noise.
According to Equation (12) of the analysis, the phase error introduced by the synchronous antenna pattern is much smaller than 0.01° and can be ignored. The phase jitter of the BiSAR transmit and receive channels can generally be controlled within 0.01°, and the impact on the phase synchronization performance is also small, having little effect on the phase synchronization performance. The receiver noise phase jitter, which can be regarded as the total synchronization link error caused by the receiver noise and sampling, after azimuth compression, can be further reduced. From Equation (12), it can be seen that the first term is the phase difference formed by the frequency deviation of the primary satellite and the slave satellite, where the accuracy of the atomic clock frequency used on GNSS is more than 10
−12 orders of magnitude [
25]. It can be compensated by the frequency and time difference data in the primary and slave satellites. The fifth and sixth terms are the phase difference formed by the phase noise, which can be obtained from the phase synchronization signal as an FFT algorithm.
3.2. Hardware Implementation of Phase Synchronization Scheme
In accordance with the above phase synchronization scheme, the L-band radar central electronic equipment with the phase synchronization function of the primary satellite and the slave satellite is developed, and the ground verification test of phase synchronization is carried out. The structure block diagram of the LuTan-1 ground test system is in
Figure 5.
In the test experiment, two satellites are placed in a microwave anechoic chamber. An optical delay line is used to simulate the echo-receiving process for the two satellites. The primary satellite transmits the radar signal. The radar signal passes through the optical delay line and then is received by the primary satellite and slave satellite. After range compression, the peak phases of the radar echo signals, which can be referred to as the reference phases, are extracted in the peak position for primary satellite and slave satellite, respectively. The synchronization signals are exchanges between two synchronization antennas. The phase synchronization scheme performance of the system can be obtained by analyzing the experimental data with a 120 s data take.
As shown in
Figure 5, the GNSS disciplined oscillator module employs a disciplined rubidium clock to provide a time frequency signal for the reference frequency source. The LFM signal source is composed of three parts: a programmable digital chirp baseband generation module, quadrature modulation and power amplification and a multimode output module. According to the programming control signal, a baseband linear frequency modulation signal with a certain bandwidth, a certain pulse width and a specified slope that meets the needs of the system is generated. Mode combination gating filtering and power amplification to obtain RF chirp signals are used to meet the requirements in time domain, frequency domain, modulation domain and signal power. The former data module completes the analog-to-digital conversion (ADC) of the intermediate frequency. An optical delay line is used to simulate the echo-receiving process for the two satellites. The primary satellite transmits the radar signal. The radar signal passes through the optical delay line and then is received by the primary satellite and slave satellite.
The test system consists of the satellite interface analog system, the primary satellite central electronic equipment, the slave satellite central electronic equipment, the two-channel data acquisition and data processing system and the quadrifilar helix antenna used for the LuTan-1 phase synchronization link. The experimental parameters are shown in
Table 1.
The satellite interface ground analog system sends control instructions to the central electronic equipment of the two satellites through a 1553 data bus and obtains their important telemetry values in real time to ensure the normal operation of the two satellites. The two-channel data acquisition and data processing system collects the echo signal and synchronization signal at the same time, calculates the compensation phase and compensates the echo data of the slave satellite point-to-point. The central electronic equipment of the SAR system consists of a signal generation unit, a transmit/receive unit and an inner calibration unit. The LFM signals transmitted by the primary satellite pass through the optical delay line, and then they are received by the two satellites to simulate the echo-receiving process. The synchronization pulses are transmitted using the quadrifilar helix antenna between the two satellites.
The quadrifilar helix antenna used for synchronization link in the test system is shown in
Figure 6. This quadrifilar helix antenna incorporated broadband antennas, a wide beam, circular polarization, light weight and low-profile design. The actual measurement results show that the antenna standing wave bandwidth can reach 61.1%, and the 3 dB beam width is greater than 120°.
4. Discussion
4.1. Theoretical Error Analysis
In the test system, the GNSS disciplined oscillator module employs a disciplined rubidium clock to provide a time frequency signal. The ground GNSS disciplined oscillator has added the function of correcting phase every 10 s. For LuTan-1 synchronization, where the maximum value can be set to 1/2 PRF, the system works at a high phase synchronization frequency, so as to avoid a phase synchronization precision error and ensure phase synchronization accuracy. The receiver noise, which consists of thermal noise and the noise collected by the synchronization, will introduce both amplitude and phase fluctuations to the synchronization signal and reduce the accuracy of phase synchronization [
15].
The total phase variance in phase synchronization can be written as [
15]
where
denotes the interpolation variance,
denotes the aliasing variance,
is filter mismatch variance and
is the receiver noise variance. In the proposed synchronization scheme, the synchronization rate can be very high. As a result, the interpolation variance and aliasing variance are very small and can be ignored in the analysis. In addition, supposing there is no filter mismatch error,
is also ignored for the sake of simplification. Therefore, the total error variance can be expressed as follows [
15]
where
is the synchronization rate.
is the transfer function and can be written as:
Using the error model mentioned above, the theoretical bounds are given in
Figure 7.
Therefore, as shown in
Figure 7, if we want the SNR of the phase synchronization signal to be around 30 dB, the phase accuracy is within 1°.
4.2. Results of Test Experiment
Figure 8a shows that the primary satellite works spontaneously, its phase basically does not change with time, while the signal received by the slave satellite is sent by the primary satellite, and its phase changes with azimuth time. In the ground test system experiment, the system works in the BiSAR mode. Further, the primary satellite and slave satellite respectively use two sets of GNSS disciplined oscillators and reference frequency sources. The GNSS disciplined oscillator employs a disciplined rubidium clock to provide a time frequency signal for the reference frequency source module, and the multiple working frequency signals are generated by the reference frequency source. The primary satellite is self-transmitting and self-receiving, and since there is no synchronization error, the phase change of the recorded radar signals is mainly introduced by the system instrument, which can be ignored. The slave satellite is only-receiving, and the radar echo signals’ phase change is introduced by the GNSS disciplined oscillator module. Because the ground GNSS disciplined oscillator has added the function of correcting phase every 10 s, the radar echo phase of the slave satellite is periodically calibrated, as shown in the blue curve in
Figure 8a. The primary satellite synchronization phase path and slave satellite synchronization phase path is shown in
Figure 8b. The LFM-phase synchronization scheme, the radar signal phases and the synchronization phases of the two satellites are shown in
Figure 8c,d, respectively.
Figure 9 shows the echo phase compensation phase of the two satellites and the compensation phase path of the pulsed signal at carrier frequency (PSCF)-phase synchronization scheme. The compensation phase path is very close to the echo phase difference path. The residual phase is obtained after the compensation, which can be seen in
Figure 9.
Figure 10 shows the echo phase difference and compensation phase of the two satellites. The LFM-phase signal scheme residual phase is obtained after the compensation, which can be seen in
Figure 10a, the standard deviation (STD) of the residual phase value is 0.978° and the peak–peak value is 0.524°. The pulsed signal at carrier frequency (PSCF) phase signal scheme residual phase is obtained after the compensation, which can be seen in
Figure 10b, the standard deviation (STD) of the residual phase value is 0.780° and the peak–peak value is 1.139°. The comparison results of LFM-phase signal and PSCF-phase signal phase synchronization schemes are shown in
Table 2. It can be seen that the PSCF-phase signal is slightly worse than the linear frequency modulation during the short-term startup of the BiSAR, but it can meet the requirements of accuracy. Moreover, the non-interrupted PSCF at carrier frequency synchronization strategy has simple requirements for system design and high system reliability, which have guiding significance for the synchronization design of bistatic and multistatic SAR systems.
5. Conclusions
In this paper, an improved scheme of non-interrupted synchronization pair alternates based on pulsed signal at carrier frequency phase synchronization signal is implemented and verified in the LuTan-1 ground test system. The feasibility of using a pulse signal at a carrier frequency as a phase synchronization signal and using an FFT algorithm to rapidly extract the synchronization error of two satellites and the phase synchronization in imaging are analyzed. In addition, the performance of the proposed scheme is verified by test results of the ground validation system. In order to further improve the BiSAR system reliability and reduce system complexity, compared with the LFM-phase synchronization scheme, the PSCF-phase synchronization scheme has an independent synchronization path to correct phase changes during the synchronization operation. Finally, the PSCF-phase synchronization system can fulfil the synchronization accuracy requirement for the BiSAR system.
Author Contributions
Conceptualization, K.L., Y.C. and R.W.; methodology, Y.C., K.L. and D.L. (Da Liang); software, D.L. (Da Liang), H.Y. and X.W.; validation, Y.C., K.L. and D.L. (Dacheng Liu); writing—original draft preparation, Y.C. and D.L. (Da Liang); writing—review and editing, Y.C., D.L. (Da Liang), D.L. (Dacheng Liu), Y.J. and H.Z.; visualization, D.L. (Da Liang) and H.Z.; project administration, R.W.; funding acquisition, R.W. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
This research was supported in part by the National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Abbreviations
The following abbreviations are used in this manuscript:
SAR | Synthetic aperture radar |
BiSAR | Bistatic synthetic aperture radar |
LFM | Linear frequency modulation |
PRT | Pulse repetition time |
PRF | Pulse repetition frequency |
GNSS | Global navigation satellite system |
FFT | Fast Fourier transform |
DEM | Digital elevation models |
PSCF | Pulsed signal at carrier frequency |
STD | Standard deviation |
SNR | Signal-noise ratio |
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