Location
Utah State University
Start Date
5-9-2012 1:30 PM
Description
In the summer 2009 NASA Characterization of Arctic Sea Ice Experiment (CASIE09), the microASAR, a small LFMCW SAR, was operated on the NASA Sierra unmanned aerial system (UAS). An overview of the microASAR and its role in CASIE09 are described in [1, 2]. While the limitations in the motion measurements stored with the microASAR data during the CASIE09 mission originally precluded full motion compensation, motion data collected for other CASIE sensors can be employed to improve the SAR image focus and calibration. This paper describes the methodology developed to time-align this motion data and applies this data along with other algorithm improvements to the processing of the microASAR data. This paper also presents a concise description of the backprojection image processing used.
Improving the CASIE SAR Images
Utah State University
In the summer 2009 NASA Characterization of Arctic Sea Ice Experiment (CASIE09), the microASAR, a small LFMCW SAR, was operated on the NASA Sierra unmanned aerial system (UAS). An overview of the microASAR and its role in CASIE09 are described in [1, 2]. While the limitations in the motion measurements stored with the microASAR data during the CASIE09 mission originally precluded full motion compensation, motion data collected for other CASIE sensors can be employed to improve the SAR image focus and calibration. This paper describes the methodology developed to time-align this motion data and applies this data along with other algorithm improvements to the processing of the microASAR data. This paper also presents a concise description of the backprojection image processing used.