Abstract

Currently, in the spaceborne synthetic aperture radar (SAR) community, the sliding spotlight mode has been widely applied to achieve high-resolution imaging. However, limited by the system pulse repetition frequency (PRF), it is usually impossible to realize a large-scale coverage at the same time. The technique of azimuth multichannel alleviates the PRF restriction by receiving additional spatial samples proportional to the number of Rx channels. A system combining the technique of azimuth multichannel with sliding spotlight SAR is able to achieve ultrahigh-resolution and wide-swath imaging simultaneously. In the advanced multichannel sliding spotlight mode, some problems may occur. First, azimuth beam progressive steering leads to an enlarged Doppler bandwidth over <inline-formula xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"> <tex-math notation="LaTeX">$N\cdot \text {PRF}$ </tex-math></inline-formula> , and conventional azimuth multichannel reconstruction algorithms developed for the stripmap mode are, thus, not directly suitable for the sliding spotlight mode. Second, the phase characteristics of multichannel sliding spotlight SAR is different from that of multichannel stripmap SAR due to the time variation of the system Doppler centroid. Third, processing of spaceborne multichannel sliding spotlight SAR experimental data shows that the convolution function used in the full-aperture reconstruction method is closely related to the antenna phase configuration strategy of the phased array antenna system. Therefore, an improved processing frame is required for the multichannel sliding spotlight SAR, reexamining the validity of assumptions, such as the stop-go-stop approximation and that of a noncurved trajectory during the relatively long aperture time. Recently, as an exploratory study, a dual-channel sliding spotlight experiment was conducted with the Gaofen-3 (GF-3) SAR. Two experimental data sets were acquired with different PRFs. In this article, the GF-3 payload and the experiment design are introduced, and a complete multichannel sliding spotlight SAR data processing chain is provided. The first imaging results of spaceborne multichannel sliding spotlight SAR are demonstrated.

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