Abstract
A conventional interferometric synthetic aperture radar (SAR) system provides 1-D line-of-sight motion measurements from repeat-pass observations. Two-dimensional motions may be measured by combining two observations from ascending and descending geometries. The third motion component may be retrieved by adding a third geometry and/or by integrating along-track measurements although with much reduced precision compared to the other two components. Several options exist to improve the accuracy of retrieving the third motion component, such as combining left- and right-looking observations or exploiting recently proposed innovative SAR acquisition modes (BiDiSAR and SuperSAR). These options are, however, challenging for future SAR systems based on large reflector antennae, due to lack of capability to electronic beam steering or frequent toggle between left- and right-looking modes. Therefore, in this letter, we assess and compare the realistic acquisition scenarios for a reflector-based SAR in an attempt to optimize the achievable 3-D precision. Investigating the squinted SAR geometry as one of the feasible scenarios, we show that a squint of 13.5° will yield comparable performance to the left-looking acquisition, while further squinting outperforms this or other feasible configurations. As an optimum configuration for 3-D retrieval, the squinted acquisition is further elaborated: the different acquisition plans considering a constellation of two satellites as well as the challenges for data processing are addressed.
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