Abstract

The phased-array radar, basically developed with the defense systems, has mainly utilized for the atmospheric radar and the wind profiling radar in the field of meteorological remote sensing, and recently it has also applied to the weather radar for research purposes. As a further development of phased-array technology, the “Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) technique,” which has been developed in the field of communication systems, has been applied to radars. With the MIMO radar, it is possible to create a virtual antenna aperture plane beyond the actual antenna and to reduce the actual antenna size compared to that of the conventional antenna while maintaining the angular resolution. This effect is expected to reduce costs, which is one of the major hurdles in expanding phased array radars instead of parabolic antenna systems. In order to confirm the effect, an experimental observation was performed using the MU radar which is a VHF-band phased array atmospheric radar with multi-channel receivers. The MIMO technique requires orthogonal waveforms on each transmitter to identify the transmitted signals with multiple receivers, and various methods are known to realize orthogonality. In this paper, we focus on the “ Doppler Division Multiple Access (DDMA)” MIMO technique, with which slightly different frequencies are selected as transmit waveforms to separate in each receiver in the Doppler frequency domain. The observation results by measuring a beam broadening effect with the MU radar indicate that it will be a key technique for the atmospheric radar in the near future.

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