1,386 research outputs found

    SAR image reconstruction by expectation maximization based matching pursuit

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    Cataloged from PDF version of article.Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) provides high resolution images of terrain and target reflectivity. SAR systems are indispensable in many remote sensing applications. Phase errors due to uncompensated platform motion degrade resolution in reconstructed images. A multitude of autofocusing techniques has been proposed to estimate and correct phase errors in SAR images. Some autofocus techniques work as a post-processor on reconstructed images and some are integrated into the image reconstruction algorithms. Compressed Sensing (CS), as a relatively new theory, can be applied to sparse SAR image reconstruction especially in detection of strong targets. Autofocus can also be integrated into CS based SAR image reconstruction techniques. However, due to their high computational complexity, CS based techniques are not commonly used in practice. To improve efficiency of image reconstruction we propose a novel CS based SAR imaging technique which utilizes recently proposed Expectation Maximization based Matching Pursuit (EMMP) algorithm. EMMP algorithm is greedy and computationally less complex enabling fast SAR image reconstructions. The proposed EMMP based SAR image reconstruction technique also performs autofocus and image reconstruction simultaneously. Based on a variety of metrics, performance of the proposed EMMP based SAR image reconstruction technique is investigated. The obtained results show that the proposed technique provides high resolution images of sparse target scenes while performing highly accurate motion compensation. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved

    Coding of synthetic aperture radar data

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    Blur resolved OCT: full-range interferometric synthetic aperture microscopy through dispersion encoding

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    We present a computational method for full-range interferometric synthetic aperture microscopy (ISAM) under dispersion encoding. With this, one can effectively double the depth range of optical coherence tomography (OCT), whilst dramatically enhancing the spatial resolution away from the focal plane. To this end, we propose a model-based iterative reconstruction (MBIR) method, where ISAM is directly considered in an optimization approach, and we make the discovery that sparsity promoting regularization effectively recovers the full-range signal. Within this work, we adopt an optimal nonuniform discrete fast Fourier transform (NUFFT) implementation of ISAM, which is both fast and numerically stable throughout iterations. We validate our method with several complex samples, scanned with a commercial SD-OCT system with no hardware modification. With this, we both demonstrate full-range ISAM imaging, and significantly outperform combinations of existing methods.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures. The images have been compressed for arxiv - please follow DOI for full resolutio

    SAR image reconstruction and autofocus by compressed sensing

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    Cataloged from PDF version of article.A new SAR signal processing technique based on compressed sensing is proposed for autofocused image reconstruction on subsampled raw SAR data. It is shown that, if the residual phase error after INS/GPS corrected platform motion is captured in the signal model, then the optimal autofocused image formation can be formulated as a sparse reconstruction problem. To further improve image quality, the total variation of the reconstruction is used as a penalty term. In order to demonstrate the performance of the proposed technique in wide-band SAR systems, the measurements used in the reconstruction are formed by a new under-sampling pattern that can be easily implemented in practice by using slower rate A/D converters. Under a variety of metrics for the reconstruction quality, it is demonstrated that, even at high under-sampling ratios, the proposed technique provides reconstruction quality comparable to that obtained by the classical techniques which require full-band data without any under-sampling. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved

    Advanced 2D/3D Imaging Techniques for ISAR and GBSAR

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    Wavelet-Based Compressive Sensing for Point Scatterers

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    Compressive Sensing (CS) allows for the sam-pling of signals at well below the Nyquist rate but does so, usually, at the cost of the suppression of lower amplitude sig-nal components. Recent work suggests that important infor-mation essential for recognizing targets in the radar context is contained in the side-lobes as well, which are often sup-pressed by CS. In this paper we extend existing techniques and introduce new techniques both for improving the accu-racy of CS reconstructions and for improving the separa-bility of scenes reconstructed using CS. We investigate the Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT), and show how the use of the DWT as a representation basis may improve the accu-racy of reconstruction generally. Moreover, we introduce the concept of using multiple wavelet-based reconstructions of a scene, given only a single physical observation, to derive re-constructions that surpass even the best wavelet-based CS reconstructions. Lastly, we specifically consider the effect of the wavelet-based reconstruction on classification. This is done indirectly by comparing outputs of different algo-rithms using a variety of separability measures. We show that various wavelet-based CS reconstructions are substan-tially better than conventional CS approaches at inducing (or preserving) separability, and hence may be more useful in classification applications
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