Claims
- 1. A method for reduction of digital synthetic aperture multipolarized radar data while still allowing full polarimetric utility of said data, comprised of averaging and storing matrices corresponding to four along-track consecutive pixels, and using a set of average matrices thus stored to synthesize an image by computing a power signal for each average matrix corresponding to a four-look pixel after first choosing the transmit and received polarization vectors, thereby reducing the data set and number of operations required to synthesize an image for displays.
- 2. A method as defined in claim 1 wherein the process of reducing said data set for one image by averging matrices corresponding to four along-track consecutive pixels comprises computing the average scattering matrix corresponding to each of said along-track consecutive pixels of an image, and wherein synthesis of an image from said reduced data set comprises first choosing transmit and receive polarization vectors, and then computing for each image pixel a synthesized signal from the equation
- V=h.sub.r.sup.T Sh.sub.t
- where h.sub.r and h.sub.t are the desired receive and transmit polarization vectors, S is a two-by-two complex scattering matrix and for each synthesized signal of a four-look pixel, computing its power P=VV* for each thereby producing a signal for each pixel having an intensity relative to a four-look pixel V.
- 3. A method as defined in claim 2 wherein the four scattering matrices to be averaged are given by ##EQU10## wherein the power in each element of the averaged matrix is computed as follows:
- .vertline.S.sub.xx .vertline.=sqrt(A.sub.xx A.sub.xx *+B.sub.xx B.sub.xx *+C.sub.xx C.sub.xx *+D.sub.xx D.sub.xx)
- .vertline.S.sub.xy .vertline.=sqrt(A.sub.xy A.sub.xy *+B.sub.xy B.sub.xy *+C.sub.xy C.sub.xy *+D.sub.xy D.sub.xy)
- .vertline.S.sub.yx .vertline.=sqrt(A.sub.yx A.sub.yx *+B.sub.yx B.sub.yx *+C.sub.yx C.sub.yx *+D.sub.yx D.sub.yx *)
- .vertline.S.sub.yy .vertline.=sqrt(A.sub.yy A.sub.yy *+B.sub.yy B.sub.yy *+C.sub.yy C.sub.yy *+D.sub.yy D.sub.yy *)
- and the phase of S.sub.xx is set to zero while the phases at other terms S.sub.xy, S.sub.yx, and S.sub.yy are preserved as follows:
- Arg(S.sub.xx)=0
- Arg(S.sub.xy)=Arg(A.sub.xy A.sub.xx *+B.sub.xy B.sub.xx *+C.sub.xy C.sub.xx *+D.sub.xy D.sub.xx *)
- Arg(S.sub.yx)=Arg(A.sub.yx A.sub.xx *+B.sub.yx B.sub.xx *+C.sub.yx C.sub.xx *+D.sub.yx D.sub.xx *)
- Arg(S.sub.yy)=Arg(A.sub.yy A.sub.xx *+B.sub.yy B.sub.xx *+C.sub.yy C.sub.xx *+D.sub.yy D.sub.xx *).
- 4. A method as defined in claim 3 wherein each pixel has coded information said coded information includes four amplitudes, one for each of S.sub.xx, X.sub.yx and S.sub.yy, and three phases, one for each of S.sub.xy, S.sub.yx and S.sub.yy in 8 bytes as follows:
- 2bytes for amplitude stored as mantissa and exponent for the first amplitude S.sub.xx,
- 3 bytes for the three remaining amplitudes S.sub.xy, S.sub.yx and S.sub.yy,
- 3 bytes for the three phases,
- and the phase of S.sub.xx is set to zero so it need not be stored.
- 5. A method as defined in claim 1 wherein the process of reducing said data set for one image by averaging matrices corresponding to four along-track consecutive pixels, comprises transforming each scattering matrix of four-look pixels into a Stokes matrix, and adding the four resulting Stokes matrices to produce a Stokes matrix corresponding to each four-look pixel, and wherein synthesis of an image from said reduced data set comprises first choosing transmit and receive polarization vectors, transforming said chosen vectors into Stokes vectors of the transmitting and receiving vectors, and then computing for each time pixel a synthesized power signal from the equation
- P.sub.i =G.sub.r.sup.T F.sub.i G.sub.t
- to produce an intensity signal corresponding to one four-look pixel, where G.sub.t and G.sub.r are the Stokes transmit and receive vectors, P.sub.i corresponds to the Stokes matrix F.sub.i, and the Stokes matrix F.sub.i is a four-by-four symmetrical real matrix.
ORIGIN OF THE INVENTION
The invention described herein was made in the performance of work under a NASA contract, and is subject to the provision of Public Law 96-517 (35 U.S.C. 202) in which the contractor has elected not to retain title.
US Referenced Citations (11)