SAR
SAR
SAR
1. INTRODUCTION
The TNO Physics and Electronics Laboratory has been involved
in Radar Remote Sensing Research for many years. In 1988, the
development of PHARUS (Phased Array Universal SAR) started
as a logical next step after years of experience with real-aperture
Side looking Airborne Radar (SLAR). PHARUS is a polarimetric
SAR system, using active phased array technology [1]. This
airborne SAR operates on a time-shared Cessna Citation Jet and is
operated in cooperation with Delft University of Technology and
the National Aerospace Laboratory (NLR). Shortcomings are the
limited availability and the high exploitation cost of the system. Figure 1: Stemme motorglider with pod under wing
CEOS-SAR01-034
2. RADAR FRONT-END
The heart of the active phased-array will be formed by the front-
end panels, including beamforming network, T/R modules and
antenna elements. The panels will be based on multilayer
microwave boards, integrating all these functions on a single
board.
Per panel, a set of eight T/R modules will be integrated. The T/R
modules will be based on in-house developed MMICs (monolithic
microwave integrated circuits), needing only two MMICs per
module. Transmit and receive path are coupled via a circulator at
the antenna side and through a switch with the combination
network. Beamforming is implemented with the core chip MMIC,
providing digital serial 7-bit phase and amplitude control. For the
HPA, a 30 dB gain 10 Watt p-HEMT MMIC will be used. This
beam can be set on a pulse-to-pulse basis. The combination
network is implemented on the same board in a separate
microwave stripline layer.
Patch antenna elements will be used. The result is a completely
planar panel, and there will be no need for any connectors,
besides the I/O of the full antenna panel. The architecture is
scalable and a total of three panels will be used for the mini-
SAR/MTI system. For along-track interferometry and moving
object detection purposes, the signal processing will be
independent for the three panels.
3. RADAR SPECIFICATIONS
A summary of the radar specifications and operating modes for
the prototype systems is given in Table 1. The radar will operate
in X-band, with a center frequency of 9.75 GHz. MiniSAR will
have a resolution of 30 cm or less, and will cover at least a 1 km
swath in high-resolution mode, at about 3 km range. If desired, a
larger swath of 4 km can be covered at 5 km range at a lower
resolution of 0.5 m. Mini-SAR will have a moving-target
indication (MTI) mode, which can operate simultaneously with Figure 4: Example of MTI overlay over SAR image. The numbers
the typical SAR modes, and detect slow moving targets at speeds indicate the speed of the moving objects, which are cars on a
greater than 3km/h. Smaller details can be shown in the SAR motorway (PHARUS data by TNO/NLR/DUT).
spotlight mode with an azimuith resolution of 5 cm.
CEOS-SAR01-034
SAR mode
Resolution < 0.5 m (0.3m design goal)
Swath > 2 km (4 km design goal)
Frequency X-band (10 GHz)
SAR Processing Off-line, including spotlight SAR
mode (0.05 m azimuth
resolution).
Figure 5: Example of 0.3 [m] resolution swath-mode SAR data. Range > 7 km
These images are from the General Atomics Lynx radar (source:
GA website). MTI mode
Number of channels 3
Moreover, forward-looking MTI operation can be used to cue
Minimum detectable < 10 km/h (5 km/u design goal)
other sensors like infrared/optical cameras. With a sensor fusion
velocity (MDV)
capability, the moving target classification process can be
accelerated and improved significantly. MTI Processing Off-line, including SAR/MTI
The SAR can also be used for interferometry. MiniSAR can be overlays
operated in two different interferometric configurations: across or Range > 10 km
along track. For across-track interferometry two SAR images are
acquired with two antennas displaced in the across-track direction.
For this an additional (receive-only) antenna can be placed
beneath the other wing. In this configuration across-track
interferometry is performed in a single pass. The results can be
converted into topographic maps with one meter height accuracy.
An additional application is the time-lapse monitoring of changes
in topography by carrying out the SAR measurement repeatedly
over the same area. This application is called repeat pass
interferometry and can in principle be carried out with a single
antenna. It is expected that the repeat-pass mode will generate
height deformation maps with centimeter accuracy.
The along-track interferometric mode operates by appropriate
switching of the three antenna panels (placed along track),
according to the same principle on which the MTI mode is based.
In this way radial velocities of moving objects can be estimated
with an accuracy of about 0.5 km/h.
The prototype system will be integrated in the pod of the Stemme
motorglider. For this, the weight should be constrained to less
than 50 kg. The integration in the Stemme motorglider also puts
some constraints on the power consumption (<1.5 kW) and
volume of the system. An artist’s impression of the MiniSAR Figure 6: Artist's impression of the radar front-end integrated in
integrated in the pod is shown in Fig. 6. The various the pod.
subcomponents of the radar system are shown in Fig. 7. There
will be three separate data acuisition channels for MTI data
CEOS-SAR01-034
Front-end
timing generator
disk storage
quick-look processor
p o s itio n a n d central
off-line SAR processor
m o tio n
m e a s u rem e n t unit control unit
off-line MTI processor