Title :
Ultra-wide-band synthetic-aperture radar for mine-field detection
Author :
Carin, Lawrence ; Geng, Norbert ; McClure, Mark ; Sichina, Jeffvey ; Nguyen, Lam
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Duke Univ., Durham, NC, USA
fDate :
2/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A full-wave model is developed for electromagnetic scattering from buried and surface land mines (both conducting and plastic), taking rigorous account of the lossy, dispersive, and potentially layered properties of soil. The (polarimetric) theoretical results are confirmed via synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) measurements, performed using the US Army Research Laboratory´s BoomSAR, with which fully polarimetric ultra-wide-band (50-1200 MHz) SAR imagery is produced. The SAR system is used to acquire a large database of imagery, including a significant distribution of naturally occurring clutter. Several techniques are used for mine detection with such data, including several detectors that are based on target features gleaned from the modeling, as well as a matched-filter-like detector that directly incorporates the target signatures themselves. In addition, the theoretical model is used to predict wave phenomenology in various environments (beyond the limited range of parameters that can be examined experimentally). Since the efficacy of radar-based subsurface sensing depends strongly on the soil properties, we perform a parametric study of the dependence of such on the target RCS, and on possible landmine resonances
Keywords :
buried object detection; electromagnetic wave scattering; image recognition; matched filters; military radar; radar cross-sections; radar detection; radar imaging; radar polarimetry; radar receivers; soil; synthetic aperture radar; weapons; 50 to 1200 MHz; BoomSAR; RCS; SAR; SAR imagery; buried land mines; conducting mines; dispersive properties; electromagnetic scattering; full-wave model; landmine resonances; lossy properties; matched-filter-like detector; mine-field detection; plastic mines; potentially layered properties; soil; surface land mines; target signatures; ultra-wide-band synthetic-aperture radar; wave phenomenology; Detectors; Electromagnetic modeling; Electromagnetic scattering; Land surface; Landmine detection; Radar cross section; Radar detection; Radar polarimetry; Synthetic aperture radar; Ultra wideband technology;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation Magazine, IEEE