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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
Measurement and Classification of Low-Grazing-Angle Radar Sea Spikes
Yong Liu, Member, IEEE, Stephen J. Frasier, Member, IEEE, and Robert E. McIntosh, Fellow, IEEE
Page 27.
Abstract:
High-resolution dual-polarization X-band images of the
ocean surface were obtained at a grazing angle of about
3^{irc}. Area extensive imaging allowed us to study
backscatter properties of sea spikes and to compare radar measurements
with visual surface features evident from video recordings. The
vertically polarized radar images consist of distributed scatter whose
amplitude and Doppler velocity are modulated by larger scale gravity
waves consistent with Bragg scattering and composite surface theory
(CST). The horizontally polarized radar images are dominated by
spatially discrete scattering centers (or sea spikes) moving at
velocities comparable to the phase velocities of gravity waves beyond
the spectral peak. These sea spikes also exist in the corresponding
V-pol radar images, but are less prominent due to the dominant Bragg
backscatter. Sea spikes are characterized by polarization ratios H/V
that often exceed unity, typically by about 5 dB. Comparison of the
larger spikes with simultaneous co-registered video recording of the
surface indicates that approximately 30% of observed sea spikes are
associated with actively breaking waves (whitecaps) while the remainder
are identified with "steep" wave features. By classifying
the larger sea spikes according to their corresponding surface features,
we find Doppler velocities for sea spikes due to whitecaps noticeably
faster (about 50%) than other sea spikes, though the distributions for
both overlap significantly. We also find little measurable difference in
the polarization ratios of the two classes of sea spikes as observed on
the open ocean.
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