
Angle glint or “glint noise” refers to fluctuations in the measured angle of arrival of backscattered electromagnetic waves transmitted from a radar device. Active sonar tracking systems are also subject to glint noise for the same physical reason: When a target consists of many point reflectors, the backscattered waves from the individual elements interfere with one another to produce fluctuations in the echo signal arriving at the receiver. As the aspect angles of the individual elements change, the relative amplitudes and phases of the scattered components also change, leading to a scintillation in the amplitude of the return signal and glint noise components in the measurement of angle. These tracking errors are most pronounced at short and intermediate target ranges: at long range the target appears to be a single point within the resolution cell of the tracking system. Glint induced measurement errors can result in a situation where the tracking point lies entirely outside the physical confines of the target.
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