
Synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) is a form of
radar
Radar is a system that uses radio waves to determine the distance ('' ranging''), direction ( azimuth and elevation angles), and radial velocity of objects relative to the site. It is a radiodetermination method used to detect and track ...
that is used to create two-dimensional images or
three-dimensional reconstructions of objects, such as landscapes. SAR uses the motion of the radar antenna over a target region to provide finer
spatial resolution
In physics and geosciences, the term spatial resolution refers to distance between independent measurements, or the physical dimension that represents a pixel of the image. While in some instruments, like cameras and telescopes, spatial resoluti ...
than conventional stationary beam-scanning radars. SAR is typically mounted on a moving platform, such as an aircraft or spacecraft, and has its origins in an advanced form of
side looking airborne radar
Side-looking airborne radar (SLAR) is an aircraft, or satellite-mounted imaging radar pointing perpendicular to the direction of flight (hence ''side-looking''). A Squint (antenna), squinted (nonperpendicular) mode is also possible. SLAR can be ...
(SLAR). The distance the SAR device travels over a target during the period when the target scene is illuminated creates the large ''synthetic''
antenna aperture
In electromagnetics and antenna theory, the aperture of an antenna is defined as "A surface, near or on an antenna, on which it is convenient to make
assumptions regarding the field values for the purpose of computing fields at external points. ...
(the ''size'' of the antenna). Typically, the larger the aperture, the higher the image resolution will be, regardless of whether the aperture is physical (a large antenna) or synthetic (a moving antenna) – this allows SAR to create high-resolution images with comparatively small physical antennas. For a fixed antenna size and orientation, objects which are further away remain illuminated longer – therefore SAR has the property of creating larger synthetic apertures for more distant objects, which results in a consistent spatial resolution over a range of viewing distances.
To create a SAR image, successive pulses of
radio wave
Radio waves (formerly called Hertzian waves) are a type of electromagnetic radiation with the lowest frequencies and the longest wavelengths in the electromagnetic spectrum, typically with frequencies below 300 gigahertz (GHz) and wavelengths g ...
s are transmitted to "illuminate" a target scene, and the
echo
In audio signal processing and acoustics, an echo is a reflection of sound that arrives at the listener with a delay after the direct sound. The delay is directly proportional to the distance of the reflecting surface from the source and the lis ...
of each pulse is received and recorded. The pulses are transmitted and the echoes received using a single
beam-forming antenna, with
wavelength
In physics and mathematics, wavelength or spatial period of a wave or periodic function is the distance over which the wave's shape repeats.
In other words, it is the distance between consecutive corresponding points of the same ''phase (waves ...
s of a meter down to several millimeters. As the SAR device on board the aircraft or spacecraft moves, the antenna location relative to the target changes with time.
Signal processing
Signal processing is an electrical engineering subfield that focuses on analyzing, modifying and synthesizing ''signals'', such as audio signal processing, sound, image processing, images, Scalar potential, potential fields, Seismic tomograph ...
of the successive recorded radar echoes allows the combining of the recordings from these multiple antenna positions. This process forms the ''synthetic antenna aperture'' and allows the creation of higher-resolution images than would otherwise be possible with a given physical antenna.
Motivation and applications

SAR is capable of high-resolution
remote sensing
Remote sensing is the acquisition of information about an physical object, object or phenomenon without making physical contact with the object, in contrast to in situ or on-site observation. The term is applied especially to acquiring inform ...
, independent of flight altitude, and independent of weather, as SAR can select frequencies to avoid weather-caused signal attenuation. SAR has day and night imaging capability as illumination is provided by the SAR.
[Tomographic SAR. Gianfranco Fornaro. National Research Council (CNR). Institute for Electromagnetic Sensing of the Environment (IREA) Via Diocleziano, 328, I-80124 Napoli, ITALY][Synthetic Aperture Radar Imaging Using Spectral Estimation Techniques. Shivakumar Ramakrishnan, Vincent Demarcus, Jerome Le Ny, Neal Patwari, Joel Gussy. University of Michigan.]
SAR images have wide applications in remote sensing and mapping of surfaces of the Earth and other planets. Applications of SAR are numerous. Examples include topography, oceanography, glaciology, geology (for example, terrain discrimination and subsurface imaging). SAR can also be used in forestry to determine forest height, biomass, and deforestation. Volcano and earthquake monitoring use differential
interferometry
Interferometry is a technique which uses the ''interference (wave propagation), interference'' of Superposition principle, superimposed waves to extract information. Interferometry typically uses electromagnetic waves and is an important inves ...
. SAR can also be applied for monitoring civil infrastructure stability such as bridges. SAR is useful in environment monitoring such as oil spills, flooding, urban growth, military surveillance: including strategic policy and tactical assessment.
SAR can be implemented as
inverse SAR by observing a moving target over a substantial time with a stationary antenna.
Basic principle

A ''synthetic-aperture radar'' is an
imaging radar
Imaging radar is an application of radar which is used to create two-dimensional images, typically of landscapes. Imaging radar provides its light to illuminate an area on the ground and take a picture at radio wavelengths. It uses an antenna and ...
mounted on a moving platform.
SAR is a
Doppler technique. It is based on the fact that "radar reflections from discrete objects in a passing radar beam field each
ave
is a Latin word, used by the Roman Empire, Romans as a salutation (greeting), salutation and greeting, meaning 'wikt:hail, hail'. It is the singular imperative mood, imperative form of the verb , which meant 'Well-being, to be well'; thus on ...
a minute Doppler, or speed, shift relative to the antenna".
Carl Wiley, working at Goodyear, Arizona, (which later became Goodyear Aerospace, and eventually Lockheed Martin Corporation) in 1951, suggested the principle that — because each object in the radar beam has a slightly different speed relative to the antenna — each object will have its own doppler shift. A precise frequency analysis of the radar reflections will thus allow the construction of a detailed image.
In order to realise this concept, electromagnetic waves are transmitted sequentially, the echoes are collected and the system electronics digitizes and stores the data for subsequent processing. As transmission and reception occur at different times, they map to different small positions. The well ordered combination of the received signals builds a virtual aperture that is much longer than the physical antenna width. That is the source of the term "synthetic aperture," giving it the property of an imaging radar.
The range direction is perpendicular to the flight track and perpendicular to the azimuth direction, which is also known as the ''along-track'' direction because it is in line with the position of the object within the antenna's field of view.
The 3D processing is done in two stages. The
azimuth
An azimuth (; from ) is the horizontal angle from a cardinal direction, most commonly north, in a local or observer-centric spherical coordinate system.
Mathematically, the relative position vector from an observer ( origin) to a point ...
and range direction are focused for the generation of 2D (azimuth-range) high-resolution images, after which a digital elevation model (DEM)
is used to measure the phase differences between complex images, which is determined from different look angles to recover the height information. This height information, along with the azimuth-range coordinates provided by 2-D SAR focusing, gives the third dimension, which is the elevation.
The first step requires only standard processing algorithms,
[G. Fornaro, G. Franceschetti, "SAR Interferometry", Chapter IV in G. Franceschetti, R. Lanari, Synthetic Aperture Radar Processing, CRC-PRESS, Boca Raton, Marzo 1999.] for the second step, additional pre-processing such as image co-registration and phase calibration is used.
In addition, multiple baselines can be used to extend 3D imaging to the ''time dimension''. 4D and multi-D SAR imaging allows imaging of complex scenarios, such as urban areas, and has improved performance with respect to classical interferometric techniques such as persistent scatterer interferometry (PSI).
Algorithm
SAR algorithms model the scene as a set of point targets that do not interact with each other (the
Born approximation).
While the details of various SAR algorithms differ, SAR processing in each case is the application of a
matched filter
In signal processing, the output of the matched filter is given by correlating a known delayed signal, or ''template'', with an unknown signal to detect the presence of the template in the unknown signal. This is equivalent to convolving the unkn ...
to the raw data, for each pixel in the output image, where the matched filter coefficients are the response from a single isolated point target. In the early days of SAR processing, the raw data was recorded on film and the postprocessing by matched filter wa
implemented opticallyusing lenses of conical, cylindrical and spherical shape. The Range-Doppler algorithm is an example of a more recent approach.
Existing spectral estimation approaches
Synthetic-aperture radar determines the 3D reflectivity from measured SAR data. It is basically a spectrum estimation, because for a specific cell of an image, the complex-value SAR measurements of the SAR image stack are a sampled version of the Fourier transform of reflectivity in elevation direction, but the Fourier transform is irregular. Thus the spectral estimation techniques are used to improve the resolution and reduce
speckle compared to the results of conventional Fourier transform SAR imaging techniques.
Non-parametric methods
FFT
FFT (Fast Fourier Transform i.e.,
periodogram
In signal processing, a periodogram is an estimate of the spectral density of a signal. The term was coined by Arthur Schuster in 1898. Today, the periodogram is a component of more sophisticated methods (see spectral estimation). It is the most ...
or
matched filter
In signal processing, the output of the matched filter is given by correlating a known delayed signal, or ''template'', with an unknown signal to detect the presence of the template in the unknown signal. This is equivalent to convolving the unkn ...
) is one such method, which is used in the majority of the spectral estimation algorithms, and there are many fast algorithms for computing the multidimensional discrete Fourier transform. Computational ''Kronecker-core array algebra'' is a popular algorithm used as new variant of FFT algorithms for the processing in multidimensional synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) systems. This algorithm uses a study of theoretical properties of input/output data indexing sets and groups of permutations.
A branch of finite multi-dimensional linear algebra is used to identify similarities and differences among various FFT algorithm variants and to create new variants. Each multidimensional DFT computation is expressed in matrix form. The multidimensional DFT matrix, in turn, is disintegrated into a set of factors, called functional primitives, which are individually identified with an underlying software/hardware computational design.
The FFT implementation is essentially a realization of the mapping of the mathematical framework through generation of the variants and executing matrix operations. The performance of this implementation may vary from machine to machine, and the objective is to identify on which machine it performs best.
= Advantages
=
* Additive group-theoretic properties of multidimensional input/output indexing sets are used for the mathematical formulations, therefore, it is easier to identify mapping between computing structures and mathematical expressions, thus, better than conventional methods.
* The language of CKA algebra helps the application developer in understanding which are the more computational efficient FFT variants thus reducing the computational effort and improve their implementation time.
= Disadvantages
=
* FFT cannot separate sinusoids close in frequency. If the periodicity of the data does not match FFT, edge effects are seen.
Capon method
The Capon spectral method, also called the minimum-variance method, is a multidimensional array-processing technique.
It is a nonparametric covariance-based method, which uses an adaptive matched-filterbank approach and follows two main steps:
# Passing the data through a 2D bandpass filter with varying center frequencies (
).
# Estimating the power at (
) for all
of interest from the filtered data.
The adaptive Capon bandpass filter is designed to minimize the power of the filter output, as well as pass the frequencies (
) without any attenuation, i.e., to satisfy, for each (
),
:
subject to
where ''R'' is the covariance matrix,
is the complex conjugate transpose of the impulse response of the FIR filter,
is the 2D Fourier vector, defined as
,
denotes Kronecker product.
Therefore, it passes a 2D sinusoid at a given frequency without distortion while minimizing the variance of the noise of the resulting image. The purpose is to compute the spectral estimate efficiently.
''Spectral estimate'' is given as
:
where ''R'' is the covariance matrix, and
is the 2D complex-conjugate transpose of the Fourier vector. The computation of this equation over all frequencies is time-consuming. It is seen that the forward–backward Capon estimator yields better estimation than the forward-only classical capon approach. The main reason behind this is that while the forward–backward Capon uses both the forward and backward data vectors to obtain the estimate of the covariance matrix, the forward-only Capon uses only the forward data vectors to estimate the covariance matrix.
= Advantages
=
* Capon can yield more accurate spectral estimates with much lower sidelobes and narrower spectral peaks than the fast Fourier transform (FFT) method.
* Capon method can provide much better resolution.
= Disadvantages
=
* Implementation requires computation of two intensive tasks: inversion of the covariance matrix ''R'' and multiplication by the
matrix, which has to be done for each point
.
APES method
The APES (amplitude and phase estimation) method is also a matched-filter-bank method, which assumes that the phase history data is a sum of 2D sinusoids in noise.
APES spectral estimator has 2-step filtering interpretation:
# Passing data through a bank of FIR bandpass filters with varying center frequency
.
# Obtaining the spectrum estimate for