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Search Results (6)

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Keywords = staggered synthetic aperture radar (SAR)

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29 pages, 5555 KiB  
Review
The Development of a Spaceborne SAR Based on a Reflector Antenna
by Yongfei Huang, Weidong Yu, Qiang Lin, Wenbao Li and Yihang Feng
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(14), 2432; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17142432 - 14 Jul 2025
Viewed by 526
Abstract
In recent years, synthetic aperture radars (SARs) have been widely applied in various fields due to their all-weather, day-and-night global imaging capabilities. As one of the most common types of antennas, the reflector antenna offers some advantages for spaceborne radars, including low cost, [...] Read more.
In recent years, synthetic aperture radars (SARs) have been widely applied in various fields due to their all-weather, day-and-night global imaging capabilities. As one of the most common types of antennas, the reflector antenna offers some advantages for spaceborne radars, including low cost, lightweight, high gain, high radiation efficiency, and low sidelobes. Consequently, spaceborne SAR systems based on reflector antennas exhibit significant potential. This paper reviews the main types and characteristics of reflector antennas, with particular attention to the structural configurations and feed arrangements of deployable reflector antennas in spaceborne SAR applications. Additionally, some emerging techniques, such as digital beamforming, staggered SAR, and SweepSAR based on reflector antennas, are examined. Finally, future development directions in this field are discussed, including high-resolution wide-swath imaging and advanced antenna deployment schemes. Full article
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22 pages, 22814 KiB  
Article
Maritime Moving Target Reconstruction via MBLCFD in Staggered SAR System
by Xin Qi, Yun Zhang, Yicheng Jiang, Zitao Liu, Xinyue Ma and Xuan Liu
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(9), 1550; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16091550 - 26 Apr 2024
Viewed by 1182
Abstract
Imaging maritime targets requires a high resolution and wide swath (HWRS) in a synthetic aperture radar (SAR). When operated with a variable pulse repetition interval (PRI), a staggered SAR can realize HRWS imaging, which needs to be reconstructed due to echo pulse loss [...] Read more.
Imaging maritime targets requires a high resolution and wide swath (HWRS) in a synthetic aperture radar (SAR). When operated with a variable pulse repetition interval (PRI), a staggered SAR can realize HRWS imaging, which needs to be reconstructed due to echo pulse loss and a nonuniformly sampled signal along the azimuth. The existing reconstruction algorithms are designed for stationary scenes in a staggered SAR mode, and thus, produce evident image defocusing caused by complex target motion for moving targets. Typically, the nonuniform sampling and complex motion of maritime targets aggravate the spectrum aliasing in a staggered SAR mode, causing inevitable ambiguity and degradation in its reconstruction performance. To this end, this study analyzed the spectrum of maritime targets in a staggered SAR system through theoretical derivation. After this, a reconstruction method named MBLCFD (Modified Best Linear Unbaised and Complex-Lag Time-Frequency Distribution) is proposed to refocus the blurred maritime target. First, the signal model of the maritime target with 3D rotation accompanying roll–pitch–yaw movement was established under the curved orbit of the satellite. The best linear unbiased (BLU) method was modified to alleviate the coupling of nonuniform sampling and target motion. A precise SAR algorithm was performed based on the method of inverse reversion to counteract the effect of a curved orbit and wide swath. Based on the hybrid SAR/ISAR technique, the complex-lag time-frequency distribution was exploited to refocus the maritime target images. Simulations and experiments were carried out to verify the effectiveness of the proposed method, providing precise refocusing performance in staggered mode. Full article
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24 pages, 5011 KiB  
Article
A Sparse SAR Imaging Method for Low-Oversampled Staggered Mode via Compound Regularization
by Mingqian Liu, Jie Pan, Jinbiao Zhu, Zhengchao Chen, Bingchen Zhang and Yirong Wu
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(8), 1459; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16081459 - 20 Apr 2024
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 1557
Abstract
High-resolution wide-swath (HRWS) imaging is the research focus of the modern spaceborne synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) imaging field, with significant relevance and vast application potential. Staggered SAR, as an innovative imaging system, mitigates blind areas across the entire swath by periodically altering the radar [...] Read more.
High-resolution wide-swath (HRWS) imaging is the research focus of the modern spaceborne synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) imaging field, with significant relevance and vast application potential. Staggered SAR, as an innovative imaging system, mitigates blind areas across the entire swath by periodically altering the radar pulse repetition interval (PRI), thereby extending the swath width to multiples of that achievable by conventional systems. However, the staggered mode introduces inherent challenges, such as nonuniform azimuth sampling and echo data loss, leading to azimuth ambiguities and substantially impacting image quality. This paper proposes a sparse SAR imaging method for the low-oversampled staggered mode via compound regularization. The proposed method not only effectively suppresses azimuth ambiguities arising from nonuniform sampling without necessitating the restoration of missing echo data, but also incorporates total variation (TV) regularization into the sparse reconstruction model. This enhances the accurate reconstruction of distributed targets within the scene. The efficacy of the proposed method is substantiated through simulations and real data experiments from spaceborne missions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Spaceborne High-Resolution SAR Imaging)
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30 pages, 38046 KiB  
Article
MosReformer: Reconstruction and Separation of Multiple Moving Targets for Staggered SAR Imaging
by Xin Qi, Yun Zhang, Yicheng Jiang, Zitao Liu and Chang Yang
Remote Sens. 2023, 15(20), 4911; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15204911 - 11 Oct 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1479
Abstract
Maritime moving target imaging using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) demands high resolution and wide swath (HRWS). Using the variable pulse repetition interval (PRI), staggered SAR can achieve seamless HRWS imaging. The reconstruction should be performed since the variable PRI causes echo pulse loss [...] Read more.
Maritime moving target imaging using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) demands high resolution and wide swath (HRWS). Using the variable pulse repetition interval (PRI), staggered SAR can achieve seamless HRWS imaging. The reconstruction should be performed since the variable PRI causes echo pulse loss and nonuniformly sampled signals in azimuth, both of which result in spectrum aliasing. The existing reconstruction methods are designed for stationary scenes and have achieved impressive results. However, for moving targets, these methods inevitably introduce reconstruction errors. The target motion coupled with non-uniform sampling aggravates the spectral aliasing and degrades the reconstruction performance. This phenomenon becomes more severe, particularly in scenes involving multiple moving targets, since the distinct motion parameter has its unique effect on spectrum aliasing, resulting in the overlapping of various aliasing effects. Consequently, it becomes difficult to reconstruct and separate the echoes of the multiple moving targets with high precision in staggered mode. To this end, motivated by deep learning, this paper proposes a novel Transformer-based algorithm to image multiple moving targets in a staggered SAR system. The reconstruction and the separation of the multiple moving targets are achieved through a proposed network named MosReFormer (Multiple moving target separation and reconstruction Transformer). Adopting a gated single-head Transformer network with convolution-augmented joint self-attention, the proposed MosReFormer network can mitigate the reconstruction errors and separate the signals of multiple moving targets simultaneously. Simulations and experiments on raw data show that the reconstructed and separated results are close to ideal imaging results which are sampled uniformly in azimuth with constant PRI, verifying the feasibility and effectiveness of the proposed algorithm. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Radar Imaging with Deep Learning Algorithms)
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19 pages, 686 KiB  
Article
An Efficient Algorithm for De-Interleaving Staggered PRI Signals
by Wenhai Cheng, Qunying Zhang, Jiaming Dong, Haiying Wang and Xiaojun Liu
Appl. Sci. 2023, 13(13), 7977; https://doi.org/10.3390/app13137977 - 7 Jul 2023
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2436
Abstract
Resolution and mapping bandwidth are the two most important image performance indicators that reflect satellite synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imaging reconnaissance capability. The PRI-staggered signal can simultaneously achieve high resolution in azimuth and wide swath during SAR imaging, and is an important signal [...] Read more.
Resolution and mapping bandwidth are the two most important image performance indicators that reflect satellite synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imaging reconnaissance capability. The PRI-staggered signal can simultaneously achieve high resolution in azimuth and wide swath during SAR imaging, and is an important signal form of SAR. It is important for anti-SAR reconnaissance to de-interleave the staggered PRI signal from the mixed signals. To address the problem that the existing staggered signal de-interleaving algorithms cannot accommodate PRI jitter and are computationally inefficient, this paper proposes an efficient algorithm for de-interleaving staggered PRI signals. A clustering-based square sine wave interpolation method and a threshold criterion are proposed, improving computational efficiency while suppressing interference between sub-PRIs and the frame period of the staggered PRI signal. In addition, a sequence retrieval algorithm incorporating matched filter theory is proposed to improve the separation accuracy of radar pulse sequences. The simulation shows that the novel algorithm can adapt to PRI jitter and de-interleave staggered PRI signals from mixed signals with high efficiency. Compared with the existing staggered signal de-interleaving algorithm, the computational efficiency is improved by an order of magnitude. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Radar Signal and Data Processing with Applications)
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20 pages, 3662 KiB  
Article
High-Resolution Wide-Swath Ambiguous Synthetic Aperture Radar Modes for Ship Monitoring
by Nertjana Ustalli and Michelangelo Villano
Remote Sens. 2022, 14(13), 3102; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14133102 - 28 Jun 2022
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 2882
Abstract
This paper proposes two high-resolution, wide-swath synthetic aperture radar (SAR) acquisition modes for ship monitoring that tolerate ambiguities and do not require digital beamforming. Both modes, referred to as the low pulse repetition frequency (PRF) and the staggered (high PRF) ambiguous modes, make [...] Read more.
This paper proposes two high-resolution, wide-swath synthetic aperture radar (SAR) acquisition modes for ship monitoring that tolerate ambiguities and do not require digital beamforming. Both modes, referred to as the low pulse repetition frequency (PRF) and the staggered (high PRF) ambiguous modes, make use of a wide elevation beam, which can be obtained by phase tapering. The first mode is a conventional stripmap mode with a PRF much lower than the nominal Doppler bandwidth, allowing for the imaging of a large swath, because the ships’ azimuth ambiguities can be recognized as they appear at known positions. The second mode exploits a continuous variation of the pulse repetition interval, with a mean PRF greater than the nominal Doppler bandwidth as the range ambiguities of the ships are smeared and are unlikely to determine false alarms. Both modes are thought to operate in open sea surveillance, monitoring Exclusive Economic Zones or international waters. Examples of implementation of both modes for TerraSAR-X show that ground swaths of 120 km or 240 km can be mapped with 2 m2 resolution, ensuring outstanding detection performance even for small ships. The importance of resolution over noise and ambiguity level was highlighted by a comparison with ScanSAR modes that image comparable swaths with better noise and ambiguity levels but coarser resolutions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ship Detection and Maritime Monitoring Based on SAR Data)
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