Atmospheric refraction often influences the localization accuracy of ground-based radar for detecting space targets. Traditional methods generally utilize the measured troposphere and ionosphere data from the local station for atmospheric refraction correction and thus neglect the influence of atmospheric horizontal inhomogeneity. However, in practice, a horizontally inhomogeneous ionosphere often causes considerable residual errors in the measured range and elevation angle after refraction correction, especially for targets with low elevation angles. The ionospheric electron density profile along the wave propagation path is significantly different from that in the vertical direction of the local station, which further brings about challenges in the modeling and correction of atmospheric refraction errors. To address the above challenge, the effect of a horizontally inhomogeneous ionosphere on the range and elevation angle measured by ground-based radar is analyzed, and a geographic division modeling strategy for the ionospheric electron density along the propagation path for atmospheric refraction correction is proposed in this paper. The simulation results show that the oblique electron density distribution obtained from the proposed model agrees well with the results calculated by the International Reference Ionosphere (IRI) model, and the proposed methodology effectively suppresses residual errors in radar atmospheric refraction correction in the low-elevation detection case.
Zhu et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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