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Resumen de Geosynchronous synthetic aperture radar for Earth continuous observation missions

Josep Ruiz Rodon

  • This thesis belongs to the field of remote sensing, particularly Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) systems from the space. These systems acquire the signals along the orbital track of one or more satellites where the transmitter and receiver are mounted, and coherently process the echoes in order to form the synthetic aperture. So, high resolution images can be obtained without using large arrays of antennas. The study presented in this thesis is centred in a novel concept in SAR, which is known as Geosynchronous SAR or GEOSAR, where the transmitter and/or receiver are placed in a platform in a geostationary orbit. In this case, the small relative motions between the satellite and the Earth surface are taken to get the necessary motion to form the synthetic aperture and focus the image. The main advantage of these systems with respect to the current technology (where LEO satellites with lower height are considered) is the possibility of permanently acquire images from the same region thanks to the small motion of the platform. Therefore, the different possibilities in the orbital design that offer this novel technology as well as the geometric resolutions obtained in the final image have been firstly studied. However, the use of geosynchronous satellites as illuminators results in slant ranges between 35.000-38.000 Km, which are much higher than the typical values obtained in LEOSAR, under 1.000 Km. Fortunately, the slow motion of the satellite makes possible large integration of pulses during minutes or even hours, reaching Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) levels in the order of LEO acquisitions without using high transmitted power or large antennas. Moreover, such large integration times, increases the length of the synthetic aperture to get the desired geometric resolutions of the image (in the order of a few meters or kilometres depending on the application). On the other hand, the use of long integration time presents some drawbacks such as the scene targets decorrelation, atmospheric artefacts due to the refraction index variations in the tropospheric layer, transmitter and receiver clock jitter, clutter decorrelation or orbital positioning errors; which will affect the correct focusing of the image. For this reason, a detailed theoretical study is presented in the thesis in order to characterize and model these artefacts. Several simulations have been performed in order to see their effects on the final images. Some techniques and algorithms to track and remove these errors from the focused image are presented and the improvement of the final focused image is analysed. Additionally, the real data from a GB-SAR (Ground-Based SAR) have been reused to simulate a long integration time acquisition and see the effects in the image focusing as well as to check the performance of compensation algorithms in the final image. Finally, a ground receiver to reuse signals of opportunity from a broadcasting satellite have been designed and manufactured. This hardware is expected to be an important tool for experimental testing in future GEOSAR analysis.


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