Transcription of CHAPTER 21
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CHAPTER 21 SYNTHETIC APERTURE RADARL J. CutronaSarcutron, BASIC PRINCIPLES AND EARL Y HISTORYFor airborne ground-mapping radar there has been continuous pressure and de-sire to achieve finer resolution. Initially, this finer resolution was achieved by theapplication of "brute-force" techniques. Conventional radar systems of this typewere designed to achieve range resolution by the radiation of a short pulse andazimuth resolution by the radiation of a narrow range resolution problem and some of the pulse compression techniquesare discussed in Chap. 10. There it is shown that techniques are available forachieving a resolution significantly finer than that corresponding to the pulsewidth, provided a signal of sufficient bandwidth is transmitted. Since pulse com-pression is adequately treated in that CHAPTER , the present CHAPTER will discusspulse compression techniques only for cases in which the pulse compressiontechnique is intimately involved with synthetic aperture techniques.
CHAPTER 21 SYNTHETIC APERTURE RADAR L J. Cutrona Sarcutron, Inc. 21.1 BASIC PRINCIPLES AND EARL Y HISTORY For airborne ground-mapping radar there has been continuous pressure and de-
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