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IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation
Volume 46 Number 1, January 1998
Table of Contents for this issue
Complete paper in PDF format
Numerical Simulation of Low-Grazing-Angle Ocean Microwave Backscatter and Its Relation to Sea Spikes
Charles L. Rino, Fellow, IEEE, and Hoc D. Ngo, Member, IEEE
Page 133.
Abstract:
This paper presents the results of numerically simulating
microwave backscatter from a deep-water breaking wave profile. Enhanced
microwave backscatter from the crests of breaking waves has been
hypothesized as the source of bright short-lived microwave radar echoes
that are observed at low-grazing angles (LGA's). The characteristics of
these "sea spikes" are distinctly different from the
Bragg-scatter echoes that dominate measurements made at moderate grazing
angles. Of particular interest is the high contrast that sea spikes
present against ocean background backscatter when observed with
horizontally polarized transmit/receive configurations [horizontal (HH)
versus vertical (VV)]. This HH/VV contrast disparity has been attributed
to polarization-selective cancellation of the direct reflection from the
wave crest by the surface reflection. This hypothesis is reinforced
first by showing evidence that VV polarization is suppressed in the
intensity range that would normally be populated by the brightest
scatterers. Histograms of unaveraged Doppler-centroid measurements show
further that the depleted VV backscatter population is responding to
scatterers that are moving much more slowly than the HH scatterers. The
Doppler-centroid histograms provide a sharper delination between the two
scattering populations than do the unconditionally averaged Doppler
spectra that are more commonly reported. Finally, our numerical
simulations show evidence of an interference mechanism that selectively
suppresses VV backscatter. In our simulations, the polarization
selectivity comes from the phase dependence of the backscatter from the
wave crest. A Brewster phenomenon at the surface reflection point is not
necessary.
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