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dc.contributor.advisor Mathews, John David
dc.contributor.author Kesaraju, Saiveena
dc.date.accessioned 2019-04-23T11:56:48Z
dc.date.available 2019-04-23T11:56:48Z
dc.date.issued 2017-08
dc.identifier.citation Kesaraju, S. (2017).==$Ground-Based Observational Techniques for Meteoroid Lunar Impact Generated Electromagnetic Pulses and Lunar Sub-Surface Structure Detection$==(A dissertation in Electrical Engineering for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy). The Pennsylvania State University, United States. es_ES
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12816/4508
dc.description.abstract The lunar surface is pockmarked with large and small craters mostly formed due to meteoroid impacts on the Moon. Most of the craters formed are not erased with time due to lack of "weathering" processes such as no atmosphere and little erosion. The main focus of this research is to develop ground-based observational techniques to search for ongoing hypervelocity meteoroid impacts on the lunar surface. Additionally, to design radar observational techniques to detect and map sub-surface structures that have been buried by the lunar regolith. It is hypothesized that the developing, optically-dense hot ejecta cloud associated with the hypervelocity meteoroid impacts produce an associated complex plasma component that rapidly evolves resulting in a highly-transient Electromagnetic pulse (EMP) in the VHF/UHF spectral region. An observational EMP search was conducted in May 2014 for about 5 hours using an overlapping-band (425-445 MHz) at the Arecibo (AO; Puerto Rico) and Haystack-(HO, Massachusetts, USA) observatories simultaneously to track the common visible lunar surface from two different locations on the Earth. Observations from two locations is helpful in eliminating the false impacts. Interleaved radar observations were used to calibrate the timing and synchronize both the AO and HO systems. As the AO/HO UHF EMP search was interference dominated, an alternative search mechanism using the Arecibo L-band ALFA Array that consists of seven beams arranged in the hexagonal manner was conducted in February 2016. During these observations, at any given time few of the receive-beams were on-Moon and few off-Moon thus allowing discrimination against local interference that might resemble the expected EMP signals. While still encountering local out-of-band radar interference, this observational paradigm did yield a few likely lunar impact EMPs. Additionally, to detect the sub-surface lunar structures, high power large aperture - Jicamarca Radio Observatory (JRO) 50 MHz radar located near Lima, Peru was used to map the lunar surface and subsurface features. This was accomplished by developing or refining various calibration and imaging procedures. This radar provides the ability to map the lunar sub-surface because the 6-meter wavelength radar signal penetrates the low-loss regolith and scatters from larger sub-surface structures allowing study of these structures. This analysis further depends on the (de)polarization of the return signals. Interpretation of lunar radar signal polarization is greatly complicated by the double traverse of the ionosphere at or near wavevector near to perpendicular to the geomagnetic field geometry as described. Preliminary radar observations were conducted in October 2015 by transmitting a circular polarized coded pulse during the lunar transit over JRO. The detected lunar echoes of the duration of 13 minutes were then processed to generate the lunar Range-Doppler maps and identify the (sub)surface features. Preliminary science results from the observations are given. Each of the three observational set-up's along with the signal processing paradigms such as Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar (ISAR) mapping to form the lunar maps and the time-frequency technique to process the collected observational data are explained. Implications of the observed transient EMP events, processed lunar surface maps, characterization of the observed satellite radar echoes and the difficult radio-frequency interference environment (terrestrial-origin, Moon-bounce signals) surrounding these observations are discussed. es_ES
dc.description.uri Tesis es_ES
dc.format application/pdf es_ES
dc.language.iso eng es_ES
dc.publisher The Pennsylvania State University es_ES
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess es_ES
dc.rights.uri https://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/ es_ES
dc.subject Meteors es_ES
dc.subject Radar es_ES
dc.subject Ionosphere es_ES
dc.subject Moon es_ES
dc.title Ground-Based Observational Techniques for Meteoroid Lunar Impact Generated Electromagnetic Pulses and Lunar Sub-Surface Structure Detection es_ES
dc.type info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis es_ES
dc.subject.ocde http://purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#1.05.01 es_ES
dc.subject.ocde http://purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#2.02.00 es_ES
thesis.degree.name Doctor of Philosophy es_ES
thesis.degree.grantor The Pennsylvania State University es_ES
thesis.degree.level Doctorado es_ES
thesis.degree.discipline Ingeniería Eléctrica es_ES

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