Distributed Spaceborne SAR: a review of systems, applications, and the road ahead

Date published

2025-12-31

Free to read from

2025-06-11

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Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

IEEE

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

2473-2397

Format

Citation

Hu C, Li Y, Chen Z, et al., (2025) Distributed Spaceborne SAR: A review of systems, applications, and the road ahead. IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Magazine, Available online 24 March 2025

Abstract

As a crucial sensor for wide-area Earth observation, spaceborne synthetic aperture radar (SAR) plays a pivotal role in large-scale terrain mapping, ocean observation, disaster monitoring, and so forth. Driven by the increasing demands for diverse applications, enhanced performance, and the continuous advancement of satellite and radar technologies, the distributed configuration has emerged as a key developmental trend for spaceborne SAR. This review comprehensively summarizes the systems and typical applications of distributed spaceborne SAR. The system configurations encompass homogenous distributed SAR, formed by multiple identical or similar platforms, and heterogeneous distributed SAR, characterized by significant differences between the transmitting and receiving platforms. Typical applications of distributed SAR include intelligent target recognition, terrain mapping, deformation retrieval, atmosphere measurement, and ocean observation, among others. Finally, the review offers a prospective outlook on the future development of distributed spaceborne SAR.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Spaceborne radar, Satellites, Synthetic aperture radar, Orbits, Terrain mapping, Imaging, Sea measurements, Reviews, Extraterrestrial measurements, Atmospheric measurements, 37 Earth Sciences, 4013 Geomatic Engineering, 40 Engineering, 3704 Geoinformatics, 4013 Geomatic engineering, 4603 Computer vision and multimedia computation

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

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Funder/s

This work was supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant 61960206009, Grant 62101039, Grant 62201051, and Grant 62471042; in part by the Shandong Excellent Young Scientists Fund Program (Overseas).