PLANETARY RADAR ASTRONOMY

被引:195
作者
OSTRO, SJ
机构
[1] Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena
关键词
D O I
10.1103/RevModPhys.65.1235
中图分类号
O4 [物理学];
学科分类号
0702 ;
摘要
Radar is a powerful technique that has furnished otherwise unavailable information about solar system bodies for three decades. The advantages of radar in planetary astronomy result from (1) the observer's control of all the attributes of the coherent signal used to illuminate the target, especially the wave form's time/frequency modulation and polarization; (2) the ability of radar to resolve objects spatially via measurements of the distribution of echo power in time delay and Doppler frequency; (3) the pronounced degree to which delay-Doppler measurements constrain orbits and spin vectors; and (4) centimeter-to-meter wavelengths, which easily penetrate optically opaque planetary clouds and cometary comae, permit investigation of near-surface macrostructure and bulk density, and are sensitive to high concentrations of metal or, in certain situations, ice. Planetary radar astronomy has primarily involved observations with Earth-based radar telescopes, but also includes some experiments with a spaceborne transmitter or receiver. In addition to providing a wealth of information about the geological and dynamical properties of asteroids, comets, the inner planets, and natural satellites, radar experiments have established the scale of the solar system, have contributed significantly to the accuracy of planetary ephemerides, and have helped to constrain theories of gravitation. This review outlines radar astronomical techniques and describes principal observational results.
引用
收藏
页码:1235 / 1279
页数:45
相关论文
共 293 条
[1]  
AHEARN MF, 1988, ANNU REV EARTH PL SC, V16, P273
[2]  
Anderson J. D., 1992, Sixth Marcel Grossmann Meeting on Recent Developments in Theoretical and Experimental General Relativity, Gravitation and Relativistic Field Theories. Proceedings of the Meeting, P353
[3]   TESTS OF GENERAL RELATIVITY USING ASTROMETRIC AND RADIO METRIC OBSERVATIONS OF PLANETS [J].
ANDERSON, JD ;
KEESEY, MSW ;
LAU, EL ;
STANDISH, EM ;
NEWHALL, XX .
ACTA ASTRONAUTICA, 1978, 5 (1-2) :43-61
[4]   RADAR AND SPACECRAFT RANGING TO MERCURY BETWEEN 1966 AND 1988 [J].
ANDERSON, JD ;
SLADE, MA ;
JURGENS, RF ;
LAU, EL ;
NEWHALL, XX ;
STANDISH, EM .
PROCEEDINGS ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY OF AUSTRALIA, 1991, 9 (02) :324-324
[5]   ABSENCE OF DIFFUSION IN CERTAIN RANDOM LATTICES [J].
ANDERSON, PW .
PHYSICAL REVIEW, 1958, 109 (05) :1492-1505
[6]  
[Anonymous], 1991, J ACOUST SOC AM
[7]   SURFACE MODIFICATION OF VENUS AS INFERRED FROM MAGELLAN OBSERVATIONS OF PLAINS [J].
ARVIDSON, RE ;
GREELEY, R ;
MALIN, MC ;
SAUNDERS, RS ;
IZENBERG, N ;
PLAUT, JJ ;
STOFAN, ER ;
SHEPARD, MK .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS, 1992, 97 (E8) :13303-13317
[8]   SYSTEM OF PLANETARY MASSES [J].
ASH, ME ;
SHAPIRO, II ;
SMITH, WB .
SCIENCE, 1971, 174 (4009) :551-&
[9]   ASTRONOMICAL CONSTANTS AND PLANETARY EPHEMERIDES DEDUCED FROM RADAR AND OPTICAL OBSERVATIONS [J].
ASH, ME ;
SHAPIRO, II ;
SMITH, WB .
ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL, 1967, 72 (03) :338-+
[10]   COMPUTATIONS OF SCATTERING CROSS-SECTIONS FOR COMPOSITE SURFACES AND THE SPECIFICATION OF THE WAVENUMBER WHERE SPECTRAL SPLITTING OCCURS [J].
BAHAR, E ;
BARRICK, DE ;
FITZWATER, MA .
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ANTENNAS AND PROPAGATION, 1983, 31 (05) :698-709