Abstract
In geosynchronous spaceborne-airborne bistatic synthetic aperture radar (GEO-BiSAR) system, the airborne platform achieves high-resolution imaging by passively receiving the signal from the interested scenario. In this paper, the Doppler characteristics of GEO-BiSAR and the individual contribution of the transmitter and the receiver are first analyzed. The airborne receiver is found to be the dominant contributor for the total Doppler bandwidth, which will lead to Doppler spectrum aliasing regarding the low pulse repetition frequency (PRF) adopted by the GEO-SAR. In order to suppress the Doppler ambiguity without adjusting the PRF of GEO-SAR, azimuth multichannel receiving technique is introduced to the airborne receiver. The multichannel transfer function is derived based on the method of series reversion and the spectrum reconstruction algorithm is then modified for multichannel GEO-BiSAR. Moreover, the reconstruction performance is closely related to the corresponding spacing between each channel (i.e., channel configuration). Therefore, the channel configuration design for GEO-BiSAR aims at optimizing the azimuth ambiguity-to-signal ratio with a satisfactory level of signal-to-noise ratio scaling factor by adjusting the channel configuration. The channel configuration design is modeled as a constrained single objective optimization problem (CSOP). Then, a channel configuration design method based on differential evolution and feasibility rule is proposed to solve the CSOP and obtain the channel configuration for the receiver with the optimal reconstruction performance. Finally, simulations results are presented to verify the effectiveness of the proposed method, and characteristics of channel configuration are analyzed in detail, which can be a practical guide for the implementation of multichannel GEO-BiSAR systems.
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More From: IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing
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