With the exploration of synthetic aperture radar (SAR), the requirements for its functionality, precision, and response time are inevitably increasing, in which the technical core is the generation, reception, and… Click to show full abstract
With the exploration of synthetic aperture radar (SAR), the requirements for its functionality, precision, and response time are inevitably increasing, in which the technical core is the generation, reception, and processing of wideband signals with low time cost. Owing to the excellent performance of modern photonics, such as the ultra-wide bandwidth (UWB), flat response, low transmission loss, fast analog signal processing, and microwave photonics (MWP) promises to be an appropriate solution to improve the capability of SAR in resolution, coverage, and efficiency. However, on the one hand, due to the high sensitivity of optical fiber, moisture, temperature, or physical vibration can produce an unknown extra propagation delay. On the other hand, the wavelength shift effect should be taken into consideration for the UWB system. Thereby, under very high resolution (VHR) circumstance, two-dimensional (2-D) defocus including migration through resolution cells (MTRC) and azimuth phase error (APE) becomes a challenge for MWP SAR imaging. Unfortunately, existing 2-D autofocus approaches concerning motion errors inherently fail for the commonly underlying assumption that the prominent nonsystematic residual range cell migration (RCM) is global in the azimuth time domain. In this article, we analyze the effects of the above-mentioned negative factors in the image processing of range migration algorithm (RMA) and reveal the structural characteristics of the 2-D phase errors. A novel two-step postprocessing compensation strategy is developed, and experiments on real data acquired by an airborne MWP SAR system demonstrate its effectiveness.
               
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