Abstract

Pulse compression radar is used in a great number of applications. Excellent range resolution and high electronic counter-countermeasures performance is achieved by wideband long pulses, which spread out the transmitted energy in frequency and time. By using a random noise waveform, the range ambiguity is suppressed as well. In most applications, the random signal is transmitted directly from a noise-generating microwave source. A sine wave, which is phase or frequency modulated by random noise, is an alternative, and in this paper, the ambiguity function and the statistical characteristics of the correlation output for the latter configuration are further analyzed. Range resolution is then improved because the noise bandwidth of the modulated carrier is wider than that of the modulating signal, and the range sidelobes are also further suppressed. Random biphase modulation gives a 4-dB (/spl pi//sup 2//4) improvement, but much higher sidelobe suppression could be achieved using continuous phase/frequency modulation. Due to the randomness of the waveform, the output correlation integral is accompanied by a noise floor, which limits the possible sidelobe suppression as determined by the time-bandwidth product. In synthetic aperture radar (SAR) applications with distributed targets, this product should be large compared with the number of resolution elements inside the antenna main beam. The advantages of low range sidelobes and enhanced range resolution make frequency/phase-modulated noise radar attractive for many applications, including SAR mapping, surveillance, altimetry, and scatterometry. Computer algorithms for reference signal delay and compression are discussed as replacements for the classical delay line implementation.

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