Publication | Closed Access
High frequency scattering from trihedral corner reflectors and other benchmark targets: SBR versus experiment
121
Citations
10
References
1991
Year
EngineeringRadar Cross SectionOther Benchmark TargetsHigh FrequencyGeneral MethodRayleigh ScatteringRay Tube DivergenceOptical PropertiesRadar Signal ProcessingComputational ElectromagneticsGeometric ModelingPhysicsAntennaTrihedral Corner ReflectorsInverse Scattering TransformsRadar ApplicationSynchrotron RadiationRadar ImagingRadarAerospace EngineeringNatural SciencesSpectroscopyRadar ScatteringApplied PhysicsWave ScatteringLight ScatteringHigh-frequency Approximation
A general method for calculating the radar cross section (RCS) from a three-dimensional target is described. The target is first constructed by using a solid-geometry-modeling computer-aided design (CAD) package. Following the shooting and bouncing ray (SBR) method, a very dense grid of rays is launched from the incident direction toward the target. Each ray is traced according to the geometrical optics theory including the effect of ray tube divergence, polarization, and material reflection coefficient. At the point where the ray exits the target, a physical optics-type integration is performed to obtain the scattered far fields. This method is tested using several simple examples involving interaction among plates, cylinders, and spheres. The theoretical results are generally in good agreement with measured data.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
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