Title :
Diffraction tomographic algorithm for the detection of three-dimensional objects buried in a lossy half-space
Author :
Cui, Tie Jun ; Chew, Weng Cho
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Illinois Univ., Urbana, IL, USA
fDate :
1/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A diffraction tomographic (DT) algorithm has been proposed for detecting three-dimensional (3-D) dielectric objects buried in a lossy ground, using electric dipoles or magnetic dipoles as transmitter and receiver, where the air-earth interface has been taken into account and the background is lossy. To derive closed-form reconstruction formulas, an approximate generalized Fourier transform is introduced. Using this algorithm, the locations, shapes, and dielectric properties of buried objects can be well reconstructed under the low-contrast condition, and the objects can be well detected even when the contrast is high. Due to the use of fast Fourier transforms to implement the problem, the proposed algorithm is fast and quite tolerant to the error of measurement data, making it possible to solve realistic problems. Reconstruction examples are given to show the validity of the algorithm
Keywords :
absorbing media; approximation theory; buried object detection; dielectric bodies; dipole antennas; electromagnetic wave diffraction; electromagnetic wave scattering; fast Fourier transforms; image reconstruction; integral equations; magnetic moments; receiving antennas; tomography; transmitting antennas; 3D buried objects; 3D dielectric objects; FFT; Green´s functions; Sommerfeld integrals; air-earth interface; approximate generalized Fourier transform; closed-form reconstruction formulas; dielectric properties; diffraction tomographic algorithm; electric dipoles; fast Fourier transforms; high contrast; inverse scattering; locations; lossy background; lossy ground; lossy half-space; low-contrast condition; magnetic dipoles; measurement data error tolerance; object reconstruction; receiver; shapes; three-dimensional buried objects; transmitter; Buried object detection; Dielectric losses; Dielectric measurements; Diffraction; Fast Fourier transforms; Fourier transforms; Propagation losses; Shape; Tomography; Transmitters;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on