Takuma Watanabe

and 1 more

*This work has been submitted to the IEEE for possible publication. Copyright may be transferred without notice, after which this version may no longer be accessible. This article is intended to provide practical information about development of a cost-effective test model to achieve low-cost radar cross-section (RCS) measurement. To reduce the manufacturing cost of a model, two major possible approaches are: replacing the molding material with inexpensive one, and measuring a scaled-down model with a higher operating frequency. In this study, the former was achieved by using a resin-made model coated with conductive paste to imitate a complete metallic model. According to the scaling laws, the entire geometry, including the surface roughness of the model owing to the conductive paint, must be properly scaled down. As this roughness scaling is practically infeasible, we experimentally prove that the shape-only scaling is valid without the roughness scaling, provided that appropriate molding material is selected. As a preliminary study, two types of polyurethane resin with different density were tested for their suitability of the RCS measurement, and the resin with higher density was shown to be appropriate for the RCS test model. Based on this preliminary study, 1/20- and 1/40-scale aircraft models made with aluminum or polyurethane resin were manufactured, and their RCS were measured to demonstrate that the almost equivalent RCS patterns can be obtained; therefore, low-cost RCS testing was achieved by the resin-made scaled model.

Takuma Watanabe

and 1 more

*This work has been submitted to the IEEE for possible publication. Copyright may be transferred without notice, after which this version may no longer be accessible. In this study, we present an improved and unified approach for image-based radar cross-section (RCS) measurement by 2-D synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imaging with an arbitrary curved antenna scanning trajectory. Because RCS is a quantity defined in the far-field distance of an object under test, direct RCS measurement of an electrically large target is often infeasible owing to the spatial limitation of the measurement facility. The method proposed in this study belongs to the class of techniques referred to as the image-based near-field to far-field transformation (NFFFT) to convert the near-field data of scattering experiment into the far-field RCS. In a previous study, we have developed an NFFFT based on 3-D SAR imaging with an arbitrary antenna scanning surface. However, the previous approach is only applicable to the surface scanning which is impossible for a certain case such as measurement using airborne SAR or vehicle-borne SAR. Therefore, one requires an alternative method that can accommodate an arbitrary scanning curve, which is the subject of this study. We derive a generalized correction factor for image-based NFFFT which is designed to ensure the integral transformation in the image reconstruction process be self-consistent for electrically small scatterers. We provide a series of numerical simulations, an indoor experiment, and an airborne SAR experiment to validate that the proposed scheme can be utilized for various situations ranging from near-field to far-field distance.

Takuma Watanabe

and 1 more

This article has been accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation. Citation information: T. Watanabe and H. Yamada, “Far-Field Radar Cross-Section Determination From Near-Field 3-D Synthetic Aperture Imaging With Arbitrary Antenna-Scanning Surfaces,” IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, doi: 10.1109/TAP.2022.3161491. © 2022 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works. In this study, we propose a generalized algorithm for far-field radar cross-section determination by using 3-D synthetic aperture imaging with arbitrary antenna-scanning surfaces. This method belongs to a class of techniques called image-based near-field-to-far-field transformation. The previous image-based approaches have been formulated based on a specific antenna-scanning trajectory or surface, such as a line, plane, circle, cylinder, and sphere; majority of these approaches consider 2-D radar images to determine the azimuth radar cross-section. We generalize the conventional image-based technique to accommodate an arbitrary antenna-scanning surface and consider a 3-D radar image for radar cross-section prediction in both the azimuth and zenith directions. We validate the proposed algorithm by performing numerical simulations and anechoic chamber measurements.