Abstract

The spaceborne low-frequency (L-band and below) synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is very susceptible to ionospheric scintillation. The scintillation phase error (SPE) is a vital factor that brings about the azimuth decorrelation and leads to the imaging degradation. In this article, a methodology is described, which exploits the accurate SPE estimation to measure scintillation parameters from SAR images. First, the phase gradient autofocus (PGA) is applied to achieve the believable SPE estimate from the local area that contains a strong scatterer. Second, based on the estimated staggered index of two SPE estimates, the irregularity altitude can be derived by solving an established equation using an iteration process. Third, three parameters, including the spectrum index, the outer scale, and the integrated turbulence strength, can be fitted when the theoretical spectrum expression mostly approximates the derived spectrum. The methodology is validated on an ALOS-2 PALSAR-2 spotlight data, and its azimuth imaging was seriously degraded by ionospheric scintillation. Two existent corner reflectors ensure the accuracy of SPE estimates from PGA. The measurement results indicate that the local ionospheric irregularities are extremely turbulent and located at a lower altitude of about 220 km in the F2-layer.

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