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DCMTK
Version 3.6.9
OFFIS DICOM Toolkit
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This paper examines the theoretical foundations and signal processing methodologies of , a high-resolution microwave imaging technique . Unlike traditional stripmap SAR, which maintains a fixed antenna angle, spotlight mode continuously steers the antenna to illuminate a single ground patch, significantly increasing the coherent integration time and azimuth resolution. 1. Theoretical Foundation: The Tomographic Paradigm
To transform raw radar returns into a high-quality image, several critical processing steps are required: Spotlight-Mode Synthetic Aperture Radar: A Sign...
: The tomographic viewpoint allows researchers to account for wavefront curvature , which is critical when the ground patch is large relative to the radar distance. 2. Core Signal Processing Methodologies This paper examines the theoretical foundations and signal
: Each transmitted pulse provides a segment of the two-dimensional Fourier transform of the target scene's reflectivity. Spotlight-mode SAR is fundamentally a problem
Spotlight-mode SAR is fundamentally a problem. It can be modeled using the projection-slice theorem from Computerized Axial Tomography (CAT).
: High resolution is achieved by synthesizing a large virtual antenna through the platform's motion.