A Ka-band UAV-Borne Phased-Array SAR and Imaging Validation for Large Radio-Astronomy Facilities: A Case Study at the Mingantu Observing Station
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Xiang Wei,
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Zhipeng Lv,
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Fuhai Zhao,
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Jinsong Qiu,
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Jichen Li,
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Huaitao Fan,
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Yingang Li,
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Jian Liu,
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Xuxin Zhang,
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Jin Fan,
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Zixuan Zhang,
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Yunkai Deng
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Abstract
Synthetic aperture radar operates using an active microwave imaging sensor that enables day-and-night, all-weather Earth observation. When integrated on unmanned aerial vehicles, this provides high-resolution imaging with small size, low cost, and high maneuverability, while shortening deployment and data turnaround. Focusing on large astronomical facilities, we design and validate a Ka-band phased-array synthetic aperture radar system mounted on an unmanned aerial vehicle. The payload adopts a modular, lightweight architecture compatible with multirotor, fixed-wing, and compound-wing airframes. The short wavelength of Ka-band millimeter-wave signals enhances sensitivity to fine linear features and complex metallic structures, making it well suited for precise geometric mapping, array-layout calibration, structural health monitoring, and perimeter inspection of astronomical facilities. We conducted multiple day-and-night flight experiments at the Mingantu Observing Station and acquired high-resolution two-dimensional synthetic aperture radar images of the Chinese Meridian Project Phase II interplanetary scintillation phased-array telescope and surrounding infrastructure. Results show generally well-focused impulse responses with clear mainlobes and controlled sidelobes, supported by quantitative metrics. These results indicate that our synthetic aperture radar system enables rapid, fine-grained, and repeatable monitoring of large astronomical equipment and sites. The system also shows promise for broader applications, including geohazard assessment, mining subsidence, major civil-infrastructure monitoring, power-line and pipeline inspection, and environmental monitoring.
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