Spatial coherence of speckle for repeat-pass synthetic aperture sonar micronavigation
Abstract
Accurate positioning of autonomous underwater vehicles is a major challenge. The long-term drift is problematic if global position updates are not available, and for applications such as repeat-pass interferometry and coherent change detection, millimeter accuracy is needed. Repeat-pass synthetic aperture sonar (SAS) micronavigation is one potential technique for countering both challenges. While single-pass SAS micronavigation enabled successful coherent processing within one track, the potential is that repeat-pass SAS micronavigation can support coherent processing between passes. Both techniques are based on recognizing the speckle pattern in the seafloor return, but repeat-pass SAS micronavigation has additional challenges with the larger temporal and spatial separations between the observations. In this study, we investigate the spatial correlation of speckle as observed from SAS systems. We divide the different contributions to spatial decorrelation into three groups: 1) speckle decorrelation; 2) footprint mismatch; and 3) stretching. We examine each contribution separately and develop simplified formulas for their decorrelation baselines. When correlating synthetic aperture images, decorrelation from stretching dominates. When correlating single-element data recorded at low grazing angles common to SAS, speckle decorrelation dominates. We validate our findings on experimental data, and by combining elements into larger effective elements, we demonstrate increasing the across-track baseline for repeat-pass SAS micronavigation updates from less than 1 to 10 m.
Description
Spatial coherence of speckle for repeat-pass synthetic aperture sonar micronavigation. IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering 2021 ;Volum 46.(4) s. 1330-1345