1999 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works must be obtained from the IEEE.

IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation
Volume 47 Number 5, May 1999

Table of Contents for this issue

Complete paper in PDF format

Mueller Matrix Elements That Characterize Scattering from Coated Random Rough Surfaces

Yuzhi Zhang and Ezekiel Bahar, Fellow, IEEE

Page 949.

Abstract:

The Mueller matrix completely characterizes scattered electromagnetic waves. It relates the incident to the scattered Stokes vectors. The Mueller matrix, which contains intensity and relative phase data, is very useful for remote sensing. The Mueller matrix characterizing scattering from coated two-dimensional (2-D) random rough surfaces is obtained from full-wave solutions for the scattered fields considered in the companion paper. The general bistatic scattering case is considered in the analysis. However, for the numerical simluations presented here, the backscatter case is considered in particular, since backscatter is usually measured in remote sensing. The uniformly coated 2-D random rough surfaces are assumed here to be homogeneous and isotropic, with a Gaussian surface-height joint probability-density function. The diffuse incoherent and coherent contributions to the Mueller matrix elements are evaluated. The computer simulations of realistic models of relavent physical problems related to remote sensing of irregular stratified media can be used to determine the optimum modes of detection involving the selection of polarization, frequency, backscatter angle, and the specific Mueller matrix elements most sensitive to changes in medium parameters.

References

  1. G. G. Stokes, "On the composition and resolution of streams of polarized light from different sources," Trans. Cambridge Phil. Soc., vol. 9, pp. 399-416, 1852 (reprinted in Mathematical and Physical Papers.London, U.K.: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1901, vol. 3, pp. 233-250.
  2. E. Collet, Polarized Light: Fundamentals and Applications.New York: Marcel Dekker, 1992.
  3. E. Bahar and Y. Zhang, "Like and cross polarized fields diffusely scattered from irregular layered structures," Trans. Antennas Propagat., this issue, pp. 941-948.
  4. A. Ishimaru, Wave Propagation and Scattering in Random Media.New York: Academic, 1978.
  5. E. Bahar and B. S. Lee, "Full wave solutions for rough surface radar cross sections: Comparision with small perturbation, physical optics, numerical and experimental results," Radio Sci., vol. 29, no. 2, pp. 407-429, Mar./Apr. 1994.
  6. D. E. Barrick and W. H. Peake, "A review of scattering from surfaces with different roughness scales," Radio Sci., vol. 3, no. 8, pp. 865-868, 1968.
  7. M. I. Sancer, "Shadow-corrected electromagnetic scattering from a randomly rough surface," IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagat., vol. AP-17, pp. 577-585, Sept. 1968.
  8. B. G. Smith, "Geometrical shadowing of a randomly rough surface," IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagat., vol. AP-15, pp. 668-671, Sept. 1976.