Remote Sensing (Jul 2024)
Mitigation of Suppressive Interference in AMPC SAR Based on Digital Beamforming
Abstract
Multichannel Synthetic Aperture Radar (MC-SAR) systems, such as Azimuth Multi-Phase Centre (AMPC) SAR, provide an effective solution for achieving high-resolution wide-swath (HRWS) imaging by reducing the pulse repetition frequency (PRF) to increase the swath width. However, in an Electronic Countermeasures (ECM) environment, the image quality of multichannel SAR systems can be significantly degraded by electromagnetic interference. Previous research into interference and counter-interference techniques has predominantly focused on single-channel SAR systems, with relatively few studies addressing the specific challenges faced by MC-SAR systems. This paper uses the classical spatial filtering technique of adaptive digital beamforming (DBF). Considering the Doppler ambiguity present in the echoes, two schemes—Interference Reconstruction And Cancellation (IRC) and Channel Grouping Nulling (CGN)—are designed to effectively eliminate suppressive interference. The IRC method eliminates the effects of interference without losing spatial degrees of freedom, ensuring effective suppression of Doppler ambiguity in subsequent processing. This method shows significant advantages under conditions of strong Doppler ambiguity and low jammer-to-signal ratio. Conversely, the CGN method mitigates the effect of interference on multichannel imaging at the expense of degrees of freedom redundant to Doppler ambiguity suppression. It shows remarkable interference suppression performance under weak-Doppler-ambiguity conditions, allowing for better image recovery. Simulations performed on point and distributed targets have validated that the proposed methods can effectively remove interfering signals and achieve high-resolution wide-swath (HRWS) SAR images.
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