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The key innovation in the delay/Doppler radar altimeter is delay compensation, analogous to range curvature correction in a burst-mode synthetic aperture radar (SAR). Following delay compensation, height estimates are sorted by Doppler frequency, and integrated in parallel. More equivalent looks are accumulated than in a conventional altimeter. The relatively small along-track footprint size is a constant of the system, typically on the order of 250 m for a Ku-band altimeter. The flat-surface response is an impulse rather than the more familiar step function produced by conventional satellite radar altimeters. The radar equation for the delay/Doppler radar altimeter has an h/sup -5/2/(CT)/sup 1/2/ dependence on height h and compressed pulse length /spl tau/, which is more efficient than the corresponding h/sup 3/CT factor for a pulse-limited altimeter. The radiometric response obtained by the new approach would be 10 dB stronger than that of the TOPEX/Poseidon altimeter, for example, if the same hardware were used in the delay/Doppler altimeter mode. This new technique leads to a smaller instrument that requires less power, yet performs better than a conventional radar altimeter. The concept represents a new generation of altimeter for Earth observation, with particular suitability for coastal ocean regions and polar ice sheets as well as open oceans.
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R. K. Raney
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
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R. K. Raney (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d6c172a0177bf533ed8cd8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/36.718861