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Radar systems for the water resources mission. Volume 4: Appendices E-I

Authors :
Moore, R. K
Claassen, J. P
Erickson, R. L
Fong, R. K. T
Hanson, B. C
Komen, M. J
Mcmillan, S. B
Parashar, S. K
Publication Year :
1976
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1976.

Abstract

The use of a scanning antenna beam for a synthetic aperture system was examined. When the resolution required was modest, the radar did not use all the time the beam was passing a given point on the ground to build a synthetic aperture, so time was available to scan the beam to other positions and build several images at different ranges. The scanning synthetic-aperture radar (SCANSAR) could achieve swathwidths of well over 100 km with modest antenna size. Design considerations for a SCANSAR for hydrologic parameter observation are presented. Because of the high sensitivity to soil moisture at angles of incidence near vertical, a 7 to 22 deg swath was considered for that application. For snow and ice monitoring, a 22 to 37 deg scan was used. Frequencies from X-band to L-band were used in the design studies, but the proposed system operated in C-band at 4.75 GHz. It achieved an azimuth resolution of about 50 meters at all angles, with a range resolution varying from 150 meters at 7 deg to 31 meters at 37 deg. The antenna required an aperture of 3 x 4.16 meters, and the average transmitter power was under 2 watts.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Notes :
NAS5-22384
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.19770009481
Document Type :
Report