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Synthetic-aperture imaging from high-Doppler-resolution measurements

Brett Borden et al 2005 Inverse Problems 21 1-11   doi: 10.1088/0266-5611/21/1/001  Help

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Brett Borden1 and Margaret Cheney2
1 Physics Department, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA 93943, USA
2 Department of Mathematical Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY 12180, USA

Abstract. We develop the theory of radar imaging from data measured by a moving antenna emitting a single-frequency waveform. We show that, under a linearized (Born) scattering model, the signal at a given Doppler shift is due to a superposition of returns from stationary scatterers on a cone whose axis is the flight velocity vector. This cone reduces to a hyperbola when the scatterers are known to lie on a planar surface. In this case, reconstruction of the scatterer locations can be accomplished by a tomographic inversion in which the scattering density function is reconstructed from its integrals over hyperbolas. We give an approximate reconstruction formula and analyse the resolution of the resulting image. We provide a numerical shortcut and show results of numerical tests in a simple case.

Print publication: Issue 1 (February 2005)
Received 14 April 2004, in final form 4 October 2004
Published 9 November 2004

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