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PACE: An Autofocus Algorithm For SAR

PACE: An Autofocus Algorithm For SAR. Tuesday, September 6, 3:40 PM Jesse Kolman, PhD Lockheed Martin IS&S. Some preparation of this material was done under US Government Contract. Focusing Spotlight Mode Data. where focused (azimuth compressed) image

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PACE: An Autofocus Algorithm For SAR

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  1. PACE: An Autofocus Algorithm For SAR Tuesday, September 6, 3:40 PM Jesse Kolman, PhD Lockheed Martin IS&S Some preparation of this material was done under US Government Contract.

  2. Focusing Spotlight Mode Data where focused (azimuth compressed) image unfocused (range compressed) data i = range bin n = image azimuth position k = aperture position

  3. SAR Autofocus • Image corrupted by phase error • Multiplicative error in azimuth phase history domain • Independent of range • Results in blurring due to wider impulse response • Benefits of estimating phase error • Image quality improvement • Phase error of intrinsic value in some applications

  4. Causes of Phase Error • Non-planar terrain • Platform motion deviations • Atmospheric effects • Hardware characteristics • Software approximations

  5. Phase Error Model , where Uncorrupted azimuth phase history Data corrupted by phase error Phase correction

  6. Phase Adjustment by Contrast Enhancement (PACE) • Maximizes contrast • Uses gradient-based optimization algorithm • Versions exist for both strip-mapping and spotlight mode SAR • Fast quadratic version exists

  7. Contrast Definition Contrast of image is average of contrast of range bins Contrast of range bin is ratio of standard deviation of pixel magnitudes to mean of pixel magnitudes

  8. Optimization Algorithm • Contrast is maximized using conjugate gradients or quasi-Newton algorithm • Requires explicit formula for gradient of contrast with respect to phase corrections • Iterative • Typically requires 10 – 100 iterations • Each iteration is itself iterative, requiring 2 – 3 function and gradient calculations

  9. Gradient of Contrast , where and

  10. Computational Efficiency • Bulk of calculations are FFTs • Algorithm is parallelizable • Adjustable tradeoff between speed and accuracy • Number of iterations • Fraction of range bins used

  11. High Order Phase Error

  12. Image Blurred by High Order Phase Error

  13. Image Restored Using PACE

  14. SAR Image Before and After PACE Contrast = 0.759 Contrast = 0.626

  15. Contrast vs. Iteration

  16. Assessment of Phase Estimate Accuracy • Real SAR image fully focused using algorithm to be tested • Phase error incorporated into azimuth phase history data • Additive, white, Gaussian noise applied in measurement domain • Autofocus performed • Result compared to applied phase error

  17. RMS Errors for PGA and PACE Residual RMS Errors in Degrees

  18. Accuracy vs. Speed Comparison • Phase Gradient Algorithm (PGA) run to convergence, time and RMS error recorded • PACE run for maximum number of iterations possible in less time than PGA required • PACE run for minimum number of iterations required to produce lower RMS error than PGA

  19. Accuracy vs. Speed for PGA and PACE

  20. Advantages of PACE • Nonparametric • Highly accurate • Computationally efficient • Robust in the presence of noise • Virtually independent of scene content

  21. Quadratic Version of PACE • Common causes result in quadratic phase error • Constant terrain height error • Azimuth velocity discrepancy • Range acceleration • Single parameter problem reduces optimization algorithm to line search • Derivative of contrast with respect to parameter still needed for efficient maximization

  22. Quadratic Phase Error Equations • Model for phase error • Derivative of contrast with respect to parameter a

  23. Quadratic Autofocus Algorithm Comparison • Standard algorithms (Mapdrift, Phase Difference) have nominal accuracy of 90 degrees • One function call to PACE takes about twice as long as these algorithms • Standard algorithms can achieve improved accuracy proportional to increased processing time

  24. Accuracy vs. Function Calls for Quadratic PACE

  25. Conclusions • PACE is an accurate and efficient nonparametric autofocus algorithm • Produces maximum contrast • Performs well in the presence of noise • Does not depend explicitly on scene content • Quadratic version achieves accurate results with fast one-dimensional search

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