Side looking airborne radar


Side-looking airborne radar is an aircraft- or satellite-mounted imaging radar pointing perpendicular to the direction of flight. A squinted mode is possible also. SLAR can be fitted with a standard antenna or an antenna using synthetic aperture.
The platform of the radar moves in direction of the x-axis. The radar “looks” with the looking angle θ. The angle α between x-axis and the line of sight is called cone angle, the angle φ between the x-axis and the projection of the line of sight to the -plane is called azimuth angle. Cone- and azimuth angle are related by cosα = cosφ ∙ cosε. On the earth surface the wave comes in at the incident angle β with respect to the vertical axis at this point. The antenna illuminates an area, the so-called footprint. The direction of the incoming wave relative to the horizontal plane may be measured also. This angle γ = 90° − β is called grazing angle. The angle ϑ = ε + 90° is used for a mathematical description in a spherical coordinate system.
For the approximation of a flat earth – which is usual for airborne radar with short to medium range – the grazing angle and the depression angle can be assumed to be equal γ = ε and the incident angle is β = 180° – ϑ. The so-called LOS-vector is a unit vector pointing from the antenna to a ground scatterer. The variables u, v, w are directional cosines with respect to the x; y; z axes. The variable u is u = cosα with α as the azimuth angle between the line of sight and the x-axis.

Range resolution (across track)

The range resolution of a SLAR depends on the length of the transmitted pulse. At the ground of Earth the range resolution has got an inverse relationship with the depression angle:
The pulse width is typically 0.4 … 1 µs, i.e. = 8 … 200 m.
The shorter the pulse width the lower and the highest the range resolution, but the lower the echo signal. This limitation can be overcome using intra-pulse modulation. Using a step-frequency waveform of bandwidth B the range resolution is.

Azimuthal resolution (along track)

The azimuthal resolution depends on the beamwidth of the radar antenna. It is derived from the ratio of the physical size of the antenna to the wavelength used. By the spreading of the beam it is also dependent on the slant range.
It is apparent that SLAR antennas as real aperture could not be built large enough to achieve the desired azimuth resolution. In fact, SLAR was never feasible to be used in space because the antennas would be too large and their launch in space too expensive. Synthetic aperture radar refers to a method for improving the azimuth resolution.