Works (4)

Updated: July 5th, 2023 15:47

2014 journal article

Single-polarization SAR imaging in the presence of Faraday rotation

Inverse Problems, 30(7), 075002.

By: M. Gilman n, E. Smith n & S. Tsynkov n

author keywords: magnetic field of the Earth; anisotropic ionosphere; propagation of radio waves through gyrotropic plasma; deterioration of radar image; image autocorrelation analysis; evaluation of Faraday rotation effect; correction of the matched filter
Sources: Web Of Science, NC State University Libraries, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2013 journal article

Reduction of ionospheric distortions for spaceborne synthetic aperture radar with the help of image registration

Inverse Problems, 29(5), 054005.

By: M. Gilman n, E. Smith n & S. Tsynkov n

Sources: Web Of Science, NC State University Libraries, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2012 journal article

A linearized inverse scattering problem for the polarized waves and anisotropic targets

Inverse Problems, 28(8), 085009.

By: M. Gilman*, E. Smith* & S. Tsynkov n

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
16. Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, NC State University Libraries, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2011 journal article

Dual Carrier Probing for Spaceborne SAR Imaging

SIAM Journal on Imaging Sciences, 4(2), 501–542.

By: E. Smith* & S. Tsynkov*

author keywords: synthetic aperture radar; Earth's ionosphere; dispersion of radio waves; image distortions; cold plasma; matched filter; multicarrier probing; correction of the filter; range and azimuthal resolution; image sharpness
TL;DR: This work concludes that the deterioration of SAR images was due to the mismatch between certain parameters of the actual received signal, which is slowed down by the temporal dispersion in the ionosphere, and the corresponding parameter of the matched filter, which was taken as if the propagation were unobstructed. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, NC State University Libraries, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

Citation Index includes data from a number of different sources. If you have questions about the sources of data in the Citation Index or need a set of data which is free to re-distribute, please contact us.

Certain data included herein are derived from the Web of Science© and InCites© (2024) of Clarivate Analytics. All rights reserved. You may not copy or re-distribute this material in whole or in part without the prior written consent of Clarivate Analytics.