686 research outputs found
Millimetre wave imaging for concealed target detection
PhDConcealed weapon detection (CWD) has been a hot topic as the concern about pub-
lic safety increases. A variety of approaches for the detection of concealed objects
on the human body based on earth magnetic ¯eld distortion, inductive magnetic
¯eld, acoustic and ultrasonic, electromagnetic resonance, MMW (millimetre wave),
THz, Infrared, x-ray technologies have been suggested and developed. Among all
of them, MMW holographic imaging is considered as a promising approach due
to the relatively high penetration and high resolution that it can o®er. Typical
concealed target detection methods are classi¯ed into 2 categories, the ¯rst one is a
resonance based target identi¯cation technique, and the second one is an imaging
based system. For the former, the complex natural resonance (CNR) frequencies
associated with a certain target are extracted and used for identi¯cation, but this
technique has an issue of high false alarm rate. The microwave/millimetre wave
imaging systems can be categorized into two types: passive systems and active sys-
tems. For the active microwave/millimetre wave imaging systems, the microwave
holographic imaging approach was adopted in this thesis. Such a system can oper-
ate at either a single frequency or multiple frequencies (wide band). An active,
coherent, single frequency operation millimetre wave imaging system based on the
theory of microwave holography was developed. Based on literature surveys and
¯rst hand experimental results, this thesis aims to provide system level parame-
ter determination to aid the development of a target detection imager. The goal
is approached step by step in 7 chapters, with topics and issues addressed rang-
ing from reviewing the past work, ¯nding out the best candidate technology, i.e.
the MMW holographic imaging combined with the resonance based target recog-
i
nition technique, the construction of the 94 GHz MMW holographic prototype
imager, experimental trade-o® investigation of system parameters, imager per-
formance evaluation, low pro¯le components and image enhancement techniques,
feasibility investigation of resonance based technique, to system implementation
based on the parameters and results achieved. The task set forth in the beginning
is completed by coming up with an entire system design in the end.
Computational polarimetric microwave imaging
We propose a polarimetric microwave imaging technique that exploits recent
advances in computational imaging. We utilize a frequency-diverse cavity-backed
metasurface, allowing us to demonstrate high-resolution polarimetric imaging
using a single transceiver and frequency sweep over the operational microwave
bandwidth. The frequency-diverse metasurface imager greatly simplifies the
system architecture compared with active arrays and other conventional
microwave imaging approaches. We further develop the theoretical framework for
computational polarimetric imaging and validate the approach experimentally
using a multi-modal leaky cavity. The scalar approximation for the interaction
between the radiated waves and the target---often applied in microwave
computational imaging schemes---is thus extended to retrieve the susceptibility
tensors, and hence providing additional information about the targets.
Computational polarimetry has relevance for existing systems in the field that
extract polarimetric imagery, and particular for ground observation. A growing
number of short-range microwave imaging applications can also notably benefit
from computational polarimetry, particularly for imaging objects that are
difficult to reconstruct when assuming scalar estimations.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figure
Design and Applications of Multi-Frequency Holographic Subsurface Radar: Review and Case Histories
Holographic subsurface radar (HSR) is not currently in widespread usage. This is due to a historical perspective in the ground-penetrating radar (GPR) community that the high attenuation of electromagnetic waves in most media of interest and the inability to apply time-varying gain to the continuous-wave (CW) HSR signal preclude sufficient effective penetration depth. While it is true that the fundamental physics of HSR, with its use of a CW signal, does not allow amplification of later (i.e., deeper) arrivals in lossy media (as is possible with impulse subsurface radar (ISR)), HSR has distinct advantages. The most important of these is the ability to do shallow subsurface imaging with a resolution that is not possible with ISR. In addition, the design of an HSR system is simpler than for ISR due to the relatively low-tech transmitting and receiving antennae. This paper provides a review of the main principles of HSR through an optical analogy and describes possible algorithms for radar hologram reconstruction. We also present a review of the history of development of systems and applications of the RASCAN type, which is possibly the only commercially available holographic subsurface radar. Among the subsurface imaging and remote sensing applications considered are humanitarian demining, construction inspection, nondestructive testing of dielectric aerospace materials, surveys of historic architecture and artworks, paleontology, and security screening. Each application is illustrated with relevant data acquired in laboratory and/or field experiments
Signal processing for microwave imaging systems with very sparse array
This dissertation investigates image reconstruction algorithms for near-field, two dimensional (2D) synthetic aperture radar (SAR) using compressed sensing (CS) based methods. In conventional SAR imaging systems, acquiring higher-quality images requires longer measuring time and/or more elements in an antenna array. Millimeter wave imaging systems using evenly-spaced antenna arrays also have spatial resolution constraints due to the large size of the antennas. This dissertation applies the CS principle to a bistatic antenna array that consists of separate transmitter and receiver subarrays very sparsely and non-uniformly distributed on a 2D plane. One pair of transmitter and receiver elements is turned on at a time, and different pairs are turned on in series to achieve synthetic aperture and controlled random measurements. This dissertation contributes to CS-hardware co-design by proposing several signal-processing methods, including monostatic approximation, re-gridding, adaptive interpolation, CS-based reconstruction, and image denoising. The proposed algorithms enable the successful implementation of CS-SAR hardware cameras, improve the resolution and image quality, and reduce hardware cost and experiment time. This dissertation also describes and analyzes the results for each independent method. The algorithms proposed in this dissertation break the limitations of hardware configuration. By using 16 x 16 transmit and receive elements with an average space of 16 mm, the sparse-array camera achieves the image resolution of 2 mm. This is equivalent to six percent of the λ/4 evenly-spaced array. The reconstructed images achieve similar quality as the fully-sampled array with the structure similarity (SSIM) larger than 0.8 and peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) greater than 25 --Abstract, page iv
Hardware architectures for compact microwave and millimeter wave cameras
Millimeter wave SAR imaging has shown promise as an inspection tool for human skin for characterizing burns and skin cancers. However, the current state-of-the-art in microwave camera technology is not yet suited for developing a millimeter wave camera for human skin inspection. Consequently, the objective of this dissertation has been to build the necessary foundation of research to achieve such a millimeter wave camera. First, frequency uncertainty in signals generated by a practical microwave source, which is prone to drift in output frequency, was studied to determine its effect on SAR-generated images. A direct relationship was found between the level of image distortions caused by frequency uncertainty and the product of frequency uncertainty and distance between the imaging measurement grid and sample under test. The second investigation involved the development of a millimeter wave imaging system that forms the basic building block for a millimeter wave camera. The imaging system, composed of two system-on-chip transmitters and receivers and an antipodal Vivaldi-style antenna, operated in the 58-64 GHz frequency range and employed the ω-k SAR algorithm. Imaging tests on burnt pigskin showed its potential for imaging and characterizing flaws in skin. The final investigation involved the development of a new microwave imaging methodology, named Chaotic Excitation Synthetic Aperture Radar (CESAR), for designing microwave and millimeter wave cameras at a fraction of the size and hardware complexity of previous systems. CESAR is based on transmitting and receiving from all antennas in a planar array simultaneously. A small microwave camera operating in the 23-25 GHz frequency was designed and fabricated based on CESAR. Imaging results with the camera showed it was capable of basic feature detection for various applications --Abstract, page iv
Development of Scale and Rotation Invariant Neural Network based Technique for Detection of Dielectric Contrast Concealed Targets with Millimeter Wave System
The detection of concealed targets beneath a person’s clothing from standoff distance is an important task for protection and the security of a person in a crowded place like shopping malls, airports and playground stadium, etc. The detection capability of the concealed weapon depends on a lot of factors likes, a collection of back scattered data, dielectric property and a thickness of covering cloths, the hidden object, standoff distance and the probability of false alarm owing to objectionable substances. Though active millimeter wave systems have used to detect weapons under cloths, but still more attention is required to detect the target likes a gun, knife, and matchbox. To observe such problems, active V-band (59 GHz- 61 GHz) MMW radar with the help of artificial neural network (ANN) has been demonstrated for non-metallic as well as metallic concealed target detection. To validate ANN, the signature of predefined targets is matched with the signature of validated data with the help of the correlation coefficient. The proposed technique has good capability to distinguish concealed targets under various cloths.
Towards Large-scale Single-shot Millimeter-wave Imaging for Low-cost Security Inspection
Millimeter-wave (MMW) imaging is emerging as a promising technique for safe
security inspection. It achieves a delicate balance between imaging resolution,
penetrability and human safety, resulting in higher resolution compared to
low-frequency microwave, stronger penetrability compared to visible light, and
stronger safety compared to X ray. Despite of recent advance in the last
decades, the high cost of requisite large-scale antenna array hinders
widespread adoption of MMW imaging in practice. To tackle this challenge, we
report a large-scale single-shot MMW imaging framework using sparse antenna
array, achieving low-cost but high-fidelity security inspection under an
interpretable learning scheme. We first collected extensive full-sampled MMW
echoes to study the statistical ranking of each element in the large-scale
array. These elements are then sampled based on the ranking, building the
experimentally optimal sparse sampling strategy that reduces the cost of
antenna array by up to one order of magnitude. Additionally, we derived an
untrained interpretable learning scheme, which realizes robust and accurate
image reconstruction from sparsely sampled echoes. Last, we developed a neural
network for automatic object detection, and experimentally demonstrated
successful detection of concealed centimeter-sized targets using 10% sparse
array, whereas all the other contemporary approaches failed at the same sample
sampling ratio. The performance of the reported technique presents higher than
50% superiority over the existing MMW imaging schemes on various metrics
including precision, recall, and mAP50. With such strong detection ability and
order-of-magnitude cost reduction, we anticipate that this technique provides a
practical way for large-scale single-shot MMW imaging, and could advocate its
further practical applications
Study on THz Imaging System for Concealed Threats Detection.
PhD ThesisMany research groups have conducted studies on Terahertz technology for various applications in the last decades. THz imaging for personnel screening is one prospective application due in part to its superior performance compared with imaging microwave bands. Because of the demand for the accurate detection, it is desirable to devise a high-performance THz imaging system for concealed threats detection. Therefore, this thesis presents my research on the low-cost THz imaging system for security detection.
The key contributions of this research lie in investigating the linear sparse periodic array (SPA) THz imaging system for concealed threats detection, improving the traditional reconstruction algorithm of Generalized Synthetic Aperture Focusing Technique (GSAFT) to suppress the ghost images and applying the compressive sensing technique into the proposed SPA-THz imaging system to reduce the sampling data but maintain the image quality.
The first part of the work is to investigate the linear sparse periodic array (SPA) and its configuration with large element spacing in simulation, deriving the design guideline for such a SPA THz imaging system. Meanwhile, the improved GSAFT reconstruction algorithm and multi-pass interferometric synthetic aperture imaging technique have been proposed to suppress the ghost image and improve the image quality, respectively. Secondly, the compressive sensing technique has been investigated to reduce the sampling data. Therefore, we have proposed the corresponding discrete CS SPA-THz reconstruction model and verified it in simulation. Finally, we have devised a simplified experimental set-up to assess the practical imaging performance, verifying the proposed SPA-THz imaging system. The set-up only uses 1 Tx and 1 Rx scanning on two separate tracks to effectively realize the proposed imaging system. The reconstructed images by the GSAFT and CS approaches with the measured data have both shown good consistency with the simulated results, respectively. And the multi-pass interferometric synthetic aperture imaging has been experimentally proved effective in improving image SNR and contras
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