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1.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(22)2022 Nov 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36433619

ABSTRACT

Employing a cyclic prefixed OFDM (CP-OFDM) communication waveform for sensing has attracted extensive attention in vehicular integrated sensing and communications (ISAC). A unified sensing framework was developed recently, enabling CP-OFDM sensing to surpass the conventional limits imposed by underlying communications. However, a false target issue still remains unsolved. In this paper, we investigate and solve this issue. Specifically, we unveil that false targets are caused by periodic cyclic prefixes (CPs) in CP-OFDM waveforms. We also derive the relation between the locations of false and true targets, and other features, e.g., strength, of false targets. Moreover, we develop an effective solution to remove false targets. Simulations are provided to confirm the validity of our analysis and the effectiveness of the proposed solution. In particular, our design can reduce the false alarm rate caused by false targets by over 50% compared with the prior art.


Subject(s)
Telecommunications
2.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(6)2022 Mar 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35336585

ABSTRACT

The proliferation of wireless applications, the ever-increasing spectrum crowdedness, as well as cell densification makes the issue of interference increasingly severe in many emerging wireless applications. Most interference management/mitigation methods in the literature are problem-specific and require some cooperation/coordination between different radio frequency systems. Aiming to seek a more versatile solution to counteracting strong interference, we resort to the hybrid array of analog subarrays and suppress interference in the analog domain so as to greatly reduce the required quantization bits of the analog-to-digital converters and their power consumption. To this end, we design a real-time algorithm to steer nulls towards the interference directions and maintain flat in non-interference directions, solely using constant-modulus phase shifters. To ensure sufficient null depth for interference suppression, we also develop a two-stage method for accurately estimating interference directions. The proposed solution can be applicable to most (if not all) wireless systems as neither training/reference signal nor cooperation/coordination is required. Extensive simulations show that more than 65 dB of suppression can be achieved for 3 spatially resolvable interference signals yet with random directions.

3.
IEEE Trans Image Process ; 30: 2180-2192, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33476267

ABSTRACT

Atmospheric scattering model (ASM) is one of the most widely used model to describe the imaging processing of hazy images. However, we found that ASM has an intrinsic limitation which leads to a dim effect in the recovered results. In this paper, by introducing a new parameter, i.e., light absorption coefficient, into ASM, an enhanced ASM (EASM) is attained, which can address the dim effect and better model outdoor hazy scenes. Relying on this EASM, a simple yet effective gray-world-assumption-based technique called IDE is then developed to enhance the visibility of hazy images. Experimental results show that IDE eliminates the dim effect and exhibits excellent dehazing performance. It is worth mentioning that IDE does not require any training process or extra information related to scene depth, which makes it very fast and robust. Moreover, the global stretch strategy used in IDE can effectively avoid some undesirable effects in recovery results, e.g., over-enhancement, over-saturation, and mist residue, etc. Comparison between the proposed IDE and other state-of-the-art techniques reveals the superiority of IDE in terms of both dehazing quality and efficiency over all the comparable techniques.

4.
Materials (Basel) ; 13(18)2020 Sep 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32899734

ABSTRACT

Near-perfect resonant absorption is attained in a single-polarization single-mode photonic crystal fiber (SPSM PCF) within the long-wave infrared (LWIR) range from 10 to 11 µm. The basic PCF design is a triangular lattice-based cladding of circular air holes and a core region augmented with rectangular slots. A particular set of air holes surrounding the core is partially filled with SiC, which exhibits epsilon near-zero (ENZ) and epsilon negative (ENG) properties within the wavelength range of interest. By tuning the configuration to have the fields of the unwanted fundamental and all higher order modes significantly overlap with the very lossy ENG rings, while the wanted fundamental propagating mode is concentrated in the core, the SPSM outcome is realized. Moreover, a strong plasmonic resonance is attained by adjusting the radii of the resulting cylindrical core-shell structures. The cause of the resonance is carefully investigated and confirmed. The resonance wavelength is shown to finely shift, depending on the relative permittivity of any material introduced into the PCF's air holes, e.g., by flowing a liquid or gas in them. The potential of this plasmonic-based PCF structure as a very sensitive, short length LWIR spectrometer is demonstrated with an environmental monitoring application.

5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31831415

ABSTRACT

This paper introduces a novel and effective image prior, i.e., gamma correction prior (GCP), which leads to an efficient image dehazing method, i.e., IDGCP. A step-by-step procedure of the proposed IDGCP is as follows. First, an input hazy image is preprocessed by the proposed GCP, resulting in a homogeneous virtual transformation of the hazy image. Then, from the original input hazy image and its virtual transformation, the depth ratio is extracted based on atmospheric scattering theory. Finally, a "global-wise" strategy and a vision indicator are employed to recover the scene albedo, thus restoring the hazy image. Unlike other image dehazing methods, IDGCP is based on the "global-wise" strategy, and it only needs to determine one unknown constant without any refining process to attain a high-quality restoration, thereby leading to significantly reduced processing time and computation cost. Each step of IDGCP is tested experimentally to validate its robustness. Moreover, a series of experiments are conducted on a number of challenging images with IDGCP and other state-of-the-art technologies, demonstrating the superiority of IDGCP over the others in terms of restoration quality and implementation efficiency.

6.
Materials (Basel) ; 12(15)2019 Jul 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31370231

ABSTRACT

This paper presents a novel approach to attain a single-polarization-single-mode (SPSM) photonic crystal fiber (PCF) in the terahertz (THz) regime. An initial circular hole PCF design is modified by introducing asymmetry in the first ring of six air holes in the cladding, i.e., epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) material is introduced into only four of those air holes and the other two remain air-filled but have different diameters. The resulting fundamental X-polarized (XP) and Y-polarized (YP) modes have distinctly different electric field distributions. The asymmetry is arranged so that the YP mode has a much larger amount of the field distributed in the ENZ material than the XP mode. Since the ENZ material is very lossy, the YP mode suffers a much higher loss than the XP mode. Consequently, after a short propagation distance, the loss difference (LD) between the XP and YP modes will be large enough that only the XP mode still realistically exists in the PCF. To further enhance the outcome, gain material is introduced into the core area to increase the LDs between the wanted XP mode and any unwanted higher order (HO) modes, as well as to compensate for the XP mode loss without affecting the LD between the XP and YP modes. The optimized PCF exhibits LDs between the desired XP mode and all other modes greater than 8.0 dB/cm across a wide frequency range of 0.312 THz. Consequently, the reported PCF only needs a length of 2.5 cm to attain an SPSM result, with the unwanted modes being more than 20 dB smaller than the wanted mode over the entire operational band.

7.
Opt Express ; 26(13): 17264-17278, 2018 Jun 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30119540

ABSTRACT

-A novel photonic crystal fiber (PCF) design that yields very high birefringence is proposed and analyzed. Its significantly enhanced birefringence is achieved by filling selected air holes in the cladding with an epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) material. Extensive simulation results of this asymmetric material distribution in the lower THz range demonstrate that the reported PCF has a birefringence above 0.1 and a loss below 0.01 cm-1 over a wide band of frequencies. Moreover, it exhibits near zero dispersion at 0.75 THz for both the X- and Y-polarization modes and a birefringence equal to 0.28. This THz PCF is then scaled successfully to optical frequencies. While the high birefringence is maintained, this optical PCF has a very high loss in its Y-polarization mode and, consequently, yields single-polarization single-mode (SPSM) propagation, exhibiting near zero dispersion at the optical telecom wavelength of 1.55 µm. The ideal ENZ materials used for these conceptual models are replaced with realistic ones for both the THz and optical PCF designs. With the currently available ENZ materials, the realistic PCFs still have a high birefringence, but with higher losses compared to the idealized results. Future developments of ENZ materials that achieve lower loss properties will mitigate this issue in any frequency band of high interest.

8.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 4761, 2018 Mar 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29555963

ABSTRACT

A wide bandwidth, ultra-thin, metasurface is reported that facilitates wide angle beam scanning. Each unit cell of the metasurface contains a multi-resonant, strongly-coupled unequal arm Jerusalem cross element. This element consists of two bent-arm, orthogonal, capacitively loaded strips. The wide bandwidth of the metasurface is achieved by taking advantage of the strong coupling within and between its multi-resonant elements. A prototype of the proposed metasurface has been fabricated and measured. The design concept has been validated by the measured results. The proposed metasurface is able to alleviate the well-known problem of impedance mismatch caused by mutual coupling when the main beam of an array is scanned. In order to validate the wideband and wide scanning ability of the proposed metasurface, it is integrated with a wideband antenna array as a wide angle impedance matching element. The metasurface-array combination facilitates wide angle scanning over a 6:1 impedance bandwidth without the need for bulky dielectrics or multi-layered structures.

9.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17571817

ABSTRACT

A method for the calibration of the position and time delay of transducer elements in a large, sparse array used for underwater, high-resolution, ultrasound imaging has been described in a previous work. This algorithm is based on the direct algorithm used in the global positioning system (GPS), but the wave propagation speed is treated as one of the to-be-calibrated parameters. In this article, the performance of two other commonly used GPS algorithms, namely the single-difference algorithm and the double-difference algorithm, is evaluated. The calibration of the propagation speed also is integrated into these two algorithms. Furthermore, a novel, least-squares method is proposed to calibrate the time delay associated with each transducer element for these two algorithms. The performances of these algorithms are theoretically analyzed and evaluated using numerical analysis and simulation study. The performance of the direct algorithm, the single-difference algorithm, and the double-difference algorithm is compared. It was found that the single-difference algorithm has the best performance among the three algorithms for the current application, and it is capable of calibrating the position and time delay of transducer elements to an accuracy of one-tenth of a wavelength.


Subject(s)
Acoustics/instrumentation , Algorithms , Artifacts , Transducers/standards , Australia , Calibration , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Time Factors
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