Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Antenna Effects in Depolarization Measurements

Blanchard, A.J.; Jean, Buford Randall, "Antenna Effects in Depolarization Measurements," IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, vol.GE-21, no.1, pp.113,117, Jan. 1983, doi: 10.1109/TGRS.1983.350537

Abstract: The depolarization of electromagnetic energy scattered from natural terrain has been of interest to experimenters and theoreticians for many years. However, the reported measurements have not agreed with theoreticaly predicted results. Boresight axial ratio has commonly been used as a figure of merit to describe the polarization isolation properties of the measurement system antennas. Since depolarization measurements from terrain involve extended targets which fill the full antenna beam, boresight axial ratio is often an inadequate measure of antenna polarization purity. This paper describes antenna isolation characteristics which impact the quality of the depolarized measurements. Representative calculations demonstrate the effects of nonideal antenna systems on the observed measurements. A criterion for antenna specification is given which will provide high-quality cross-polarized measurements.

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