Abstract

Abstract The existence of significant cross-polar antenna patterns, as well as the scan-dependent measurement biases, inherent to the polarimetric phased array radar (PPAR), are among the most important risk factors for using this technology in weather observations. The cross-polar patterns on receive induce cross coupling between returns from the two orthogonal fields causing biases in polarimetric variable estimates. Furthermore, the electromagnetic coupling in hardware may exacerbate the cross-coupling effects. To address this problem, a pulse-to-pulse phase coding in either the horizontal or vertical ports of the transmission elements has been proposed. However, it does not affect the scan-dependent system biases in PPAR estimates, which require corrections via calibration mechanisms. Further, the cross-coupling signals are proportional to the cross-polar pattern power levels, rendering mitigation effective only at steering angles where these levels are sufficiently low (e.g., approximately less than −25 dB). In that regard, any approach that augments the number of such steering angles benefits the cross-coupling mitigation effectiveness. Herein, a simple approach that has a potential to achieve this via antenna tilt is presented. Significance Statement The issue of biases caused by cross coupling (due to significant cross-polar patterns in PPARs) is one of the biggest challenges for their weather observation applications. Numerous approaches have been proposed to address this issue, but none has been comprehensive. This suggests that the solution to the cross-coupling issue should be a combination of various mitigation approaches. In that regard, it is suggested in this work that a small antenna tilt can aid in the mitigation of the cross-coupling issue.

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