YOU ARE DOWNLOADING DOCUMENT

Please tick the box to continue:

Transcript
Page 1: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAIC

PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMYPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY

oror

STUDYING SOLAR SYSTEM BODIES WITH RADARSTUDYING SOLAR SYSTEM BODIES WITH RADAR

DON CAMPBELLDON CAMPBELL

NAICNAIC

Page 2: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAIC

Page 3: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAICPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMYPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY

GOOD ASPECTSGOOD ASPECTS

Transmitted signalCan control: Power

PolarizationFrequencyTime reference

Received echoExamine target induced changes in propertiesof the transmitted signal – providesinformation about the target - e.g. time delay ofa pulse tells you the distance to the target

Page 4: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAICPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMYPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY

NOT SO GOOD ASPECTSNOT SO GOOD ASPECTS

• Sensitivity is a major problem:

Require

Very high gain transmitting antennas*Very large receiving antennasVery high powered transmittersVery low noise receivers

* Gain = 4p x antenna effective area / ?2

Page 5: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

GOLDSTONE 70m NASA DSN ANTENNAMOJAVE DESERT3.5cm, 450kW TX

ARECIBO 305m NSF TELESCOPE12.6cm, 1000kW TRANSMITTER

Page 6: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAICPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMYPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY

ARECIBO & GOLDSTONE RELATIVE SENSITIVITIESARECIBO & GOLDSTONE RELATIVE SENSITIVITIES

Page 7: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

VLBA

VERY LARGE ARRAY

GBT

ARECIBO

GOLDSTONE

Page 8: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAICPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMYPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY

OBSERVATIONAL GOALSOBSERVATIONAL GOALS

• Near earth asteroids – shapes, sizes, densities, rotationalproperties

• Main belt asteroids – surface and rotational properties

• Comets – properties of the nuclei and comae

• Astronmetry on asteroids and comets

• Terrestrial planets – imaging, surface properties andspin vectors

• Outer planet satellites and rings – surface properties

Page 9: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAIC

The LUNAR SOUTH POLE12.6 cm ARECIBO IMAGECourtesy of N. Stacy

Page 10: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAIC

Arecibo – GBT bistatic radar image of Venus

Page 11: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAIC

RADAR ASTRONOMY BASICSRADAR ASTRONOMY BASICS

Radar Equation:

Average Transmitter

Power

Transmitting Antenna Gain 4π At /λ2

Normalized Backscatter

Cross Section, the radar albedo

Target AreaIntegration time

DistanceReceive Antenna

Collecting Area

System Temperature

Rotational Doppler Broadening ∞ λ-1

∝Detectability 1/2

o4 sys

Tx . Gt . Ar . s . A t BR . T

Page 12: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAICPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMYPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY

OBSERVATIONSOBSERVATIONS

• Transmit a mono-chromatic continuous wave (CW)

Objectives: The echo power spectrum – the one dimensional distributionof echo power as a function of the rotational Doppler shift.

The Doppler shift (i.e. radial velocity) of the center-of-massof the object for orbit determination

• Transmit a signal with modulation in time – pulses or phase encoding

Objectives: Two dimensional distribution of echo power – function ofrotational Doppler shift and distance (delay-Dopplermapping). Full polarization Stokes’ parameter imaging.

Distance and velocity of center-of -mass

Page 13: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAICPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMYPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY

• Normally transmit circularly polarized signal

• Receive the echo in both senses of circular polarization

Echo power in the OC (Opposite Circular to that transmitted) sense => mirror like reflection

Echo power in the SC (Same Circular as that transmitted) sense=> multiply scattered power, scattering from sharp edges, etc

• Form circular polarization ratios (µc)µc = σsc / σoc => measure of surface roughness (except ice)

whereσsc = cross section in the SC sense of circular polarization

σoc = cross section in the OC sense of circular polarization

Page 14: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …
Page 15: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAICPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMYPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY

FOR A DIELECTRIC SPHERE SMOOTH AT ? SCALES

SPECULAR ECHO POWER => CROSS SECTION (radar albedo)~ FRESNEL REFLECTIVITY

FRESNEL REFLECTIVITY = [(e1/2 – 1)/(e1/2 + 1)]2 , e = dielectricconst.

e is dependent on surface composition (e.g. rock type) or, for low density surfaces such as the lunar regolith, the porosity of the surface

SPECULAR ECHO DOPPLER BROADENING => RMS SLOPE

Page 16: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAIC

Page 17: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAIC

Page 18: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Goldstone – VLA radar observations of Titan (Muhleman et al, 1993)

Page 19: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Arecibo radar echo spectra for five sub-earth longitudes on Titan

Narrow specular spikes at 15 deg and 111 deg are indicative of very smooth surfaces

Titan’s Doppler bandwidth at 12.6 cm is 325 Hz.

OC – Sense of receive polarization corresponding to reflection from a mirror like surface.

SC – Depolarized sense, indicative of small scale surface roughness.

Page 20: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Smooth (at wavelength scales) solid surface or liquid surface?

Page 21: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

RADAR REFLECTION PROPERTIES OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON “LAKES” ON TITAN

OC SPECULAR ECHO FROM THE SUB-EARTH LOCATION

LIQUID CH4 – C2H6 – N2 MIXTURE AT 94K HAS

1.65 < DIELECTRIC CONST < 1.81 (Thompson&Squyres)

=> RADAR CROSS SECTIONS < 0.022(addition of other constituents could raise the dielectric constant)

DOPPLER BROADENING CONSISTENT WITH MAXIMUM EXPECTED WIND DRIVEN WAVE SLOPES (0.3 m/sec winds over fetches of > few km will induce waves with maximum slope of 110 (Ghafoor et al, 2000))

Page 22: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Arecibo – GBT Titan OC and SC spectrasub-earth longitude of 112 deg

Page 23: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …
Page 24: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …
Page 25: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Mercury from Mariner 10, 1974

Goldstone – VLA radar image at 3.5 cmButler et al

Page 26: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …
Page 27: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAICPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMYPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY

Radar Properties of Icy SurfacesRadar Properties of Icy Surfaces

• High backscatter cross sections (σ); unity or greater

• Circular polarization ratios (µc) greater than unity

µc = σsc / σoc

where

σsc = cross section in the same sense of circular polarization as that transmitted

σoc = cross section in the opposite sense of circular polarization – the sense expected for a mirror-like reflection

Page 28: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Arecibo radar image of the north pole of Mercury at 1.5 km

resolution.

Image is 400 x 400 km (Harmon et al,

2001)

Page 29: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAIC

The LUNAR SOUTH POLE12.6 cm ARECIBO IMAGECourtesy of N. Stacy

Page 30: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Stokes’ Parameters

+

=

= ∗

2R

2L

RL

RL

2R

2L

4

3

2

1

??

??Im 2 ??Re 2

??

S

S

S

S

S

1

3222

SSS

m+

=

=

2

3Arctan21

SSχ

Page 31: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

VLA images of the 21 cm wavelength thermal emission from the Moon in the two linear polarization Stokes’ parameters Q and U. (J-L Margot and D.B. Campbell)

Page 32: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …
Page 33: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …
Page 34: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …
Page 35: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Mainbelt asteroid Gaspra from the Galileo spacecraft

Page 36: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Arecibo radar image of the near earth asteroid1999 JM8 at 15 m resolution

Page 37: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Arecibo radar image of the near earth asteroid2002 NY40 at 10 m resolution

Page 38: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

216 Kleopatra: Upper row – Arecibo delay-Doppler images; lower row –shape model showing aspect during data acquisition; middle row – model

delay-Doppler images based on the shape model (Ostro et al).

Page 39: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Shape models for five NEAs and one mainbelt asteroid from Arecibo and Goldstone delay-Doppler images (R.S. Hudson et al)

Page 40: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

N A T I O N A L A S T R O N O M Y A N D I O N O S P H E R E C E N T E R

Binary Asteroids

2001 DP107

1999 KW4

2002BM26

Page 41: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

N A T I O N A L A S T R O N O M Y A N D I O N O S P H E R E C E N T E R

1950 DAArecibo radar image

Page 42: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Comet Borelly from Deep Space 1 spacecraft

Page 43: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

IRAS-Araki-Alcock nucleus echo

Sugano-Saigusa-Fujikawanucleus echo

Page 44: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

IRAS-Araki-AlcockEcho Spectrum

Hyakutake Echo Spectrum

Page 45: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

NAICNAICPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMYPLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY

Page 46: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

MODEL OF 216 KLEOPATRAFROM ARECIBO RADAR DELAY-DOPPLER IMAGES

COLOR CODED FOR GRAVITATIONAL SLOPES

Page 47: PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY or STUDYING SOLAR …

Related Documents