Abstract

Radio Frequency Interference (RFI) is a growing problem for future Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) missions, resulting in data loss, image artifacts and undetected biases. A new approach for mitigating RFI is digital beamforming (DBF), which is possible with the next generation of multichannel SAR systems and allows for a spatial filtering of signals from different directions. While on-board RFI removal with DBF is challenging for spaceborne systems due to the computational load, past publications have shown that this problem can be overcome with DBF-based auxiliary beams by moving most of the processing to the ground without requiring the down-linking of all channels. A remaining problem of measuring RFI information with auxiliary beams is determining the interferer position. This paper shows the performance simulation of a series of digital square-law detectors which can be used to overcome this issue. It is shown that a series of digital square-law detectors provides the opportunity to simultaneously determine if RFI is present and under which direction, while maintaining a low system complexity. This is possible because the detectors provide a good probability of detection and false alarm rate even if the data rate is decimated. The simulated system performs well for a decimation factor of 110.

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