학술논문

Maximizing the Intrinsic Precision of Radar Altimetric Measurements
Document Type
Periodical
Author
Source
IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters IEEE Geosci. Remote Sensing Lett. Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters, IEEE. 10(5):1171-1174 Sep, 2013
Subject
Geoscience
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Signal Processing and Analysis
Doppler effect
Doppler radar
Synthetic aperture radar
Radar measurements
Upper bound
Standards
Delay–Doppler
radar altimeter
sea-surface height (SSH) measurements
synthetic aperture radar (SAR) mode
Language
ISSN
1545-598X
1558-0571
Abstract
This letter derives the best obtainable sea-surface height measurement precision for the general case of a partially coherent altimeter. Analogous to the Walsh upper bound on pulse repetition frequency for a conventional (noncoherent) altimeter, there is a lower bound on burst period for an advanced synthetic aperture radar (SAR)-mode altimeter that operates coherently on groups of radar returns. The optimal pulse repetition frequency falls between the Walsh upper bound and the Nyquist lower bound. Interleaved (open burst) operation is required. Postprocessing along-track resolution—open to the designer's choice—is the principal performance-determining parameter. At the unfocused limit, the maximum range (height) precision for a Ku-band altimeter is on the order of 5 mm, which is relatively constant with altitude variations. Along-track resolution smaller than the unfocused limit implies better measurement precision but requires a more complex processing algorithm. An optimal design approach is suggested in which the altimeter operates in SAR mode and conventional mode simultaneously, thus capturing the most favorable measurement capabilities of either paradigm.