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Read Full Article (file size: 282233 bytes) Cited by
RADIO SCIENCE,
VOL. 39,
RS4011,
doi:10.1029/2003RS002935,
2004
Diffractive vector and scalar integrals for bistatic radio holographic remote sensing
A. G. Pavelyev
Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia
Y. A. Liou
Centre for Space and Remote Sensing Research, National Central University, Jung-Li, Taiwan
J. Wickert
GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany
Abstract
We introduce new vector diffractive integrals, which can be used for the radio holographic remote sensing of the atmosphere
and terrestrial surfaces. These integrals are exact relationships connecting the electromagnetic fields known at some interface
or curve in space with radio fields on the terrestrial surface or inside the atmosphere. They allow one to restore the radio
image of the atmosphere or Earth surface in the investigated regions using a radio hologram registered in space by a small
instrument installed on the low Earth orbit satellite. The high-precision radio signals of the Global Positioning System (GPS)
navigational satellites can be used as a source of the radio emission for radio holograms. We indicated a connection between
the vector diffractive integrals and scalar diffractive integral, which is now applied for the GPS occultation investigation
of Earth's atmosphere under an assumption of the spherical symmetry. For the atmosphere itself the accuracy of the scalar
theory corresponds to the accuracy of the GPS occultation measurements. The most significant factor that affects the polarization
is the reflection from the surface. The use of vector theory can thus be useful for the investigation of Earth's atmosphere
by detecting the reflected rays. We show that the reference signal needed for restoration of the radio field from the registered
radio hologram is coinciding with the Green function of the scalar wave equation corresponding to a three-dimensional inhomogeneous
medium. This substantiates the radio holographic–focused synthetic aperture principle (RFSA) in its application to the atmosphere
and surface research. We validated the high vertical resolution of the RFSA method by obtaining radio image of the atmosphere
and Earth's surface. Zverev's diffractive integral is used to compare the canonical transform (CT), back propagation (BP),
and RFSA methods. For comparison, a general inverse operator (GIO) is introduced. The CT and BP transforms can be obtained
by application of the GIO transform to Zverev's diffractive integral. The CT method can resolve physical rays in multipath
situations under an assumption of the global spherical symmetry of the atmosphere and ionosphere. The RFSA method can account
for the multipath in the case when the global spherical symmetry is absent by using the appropriate model of the refractivity
and has a promise to be effective for operational data analysis.
Received 10
July
2003;
accepted 26
May
2004;
published 26
August
2004.
Keywords: remote sensing;
radio wave propagation;
atmospheric propagation.
Index Terms: 6904 Radio Science: Atmospheric propagation; 6909 Radio Science: Electromagnetic metrology; 6964 Radio Science: Radio wave propagation; 6969 Radio Science: Remote sensing.
Read Full Article (file size: 282233 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Pavelyev, A. G., Y. A. Liou, and J. Wickert
(2004),
Diffractive vector and scalar integrals for bistatic radio holographic remote sensing,
Radio Sci.,
39,
RS4011,
doi:10.1029/2003RS002935.
Copyright 2004 by the American Geophysical Union.
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