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1.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(23)2022 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36502057

ABSTRACT

Multichannel SAR systems have grown rapidly over the past decade due to their powerful high-resolution and wide-swath (HRWS) capabilities. Because spatially separated channels also have the potential to suppress jamming, dual-channel cancellation is a general method that is effective regardless of the type of jamming signal. In this paper, the principle of dual-channel cancellation (DCC) is introduced, and several practical problems using DCC are also discussed. Moreover, this paper emphasizes interferometric phase estimation, which is the key to DCC. If the jamming-to-signal ratio (JSR) is high, the interferometric phase can be estimated accurately from the interferometry of two channel signals, but estimation becomes rather difficult when the JSR decreases. To solve the problem of interferometric phase estimation under a low JSR, a novel interferometric phase estimation method using cosine similarity is proposed in this paper. L-band airborne dual-channel SAR is performed to investigate the applicability of the method. The results not only prove that cosine similarity is an effective method for interferometric phase estimation, but also demonstrate the potential of DCC in the SAR anti-jamming processing.


Subject(s)
Food , Interferometry
2.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 9(9)2019 Sep 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31500273

ABSTRACT

Firecracker-like ZnO hierarchical structures (ZnO HS1) were synthesized by combining electrospinning with hydrothermal methods. Flower-like ZnO hierarchical structures (ZnO HS2) were prepared by a hydrothermal method using ultrasound-treated ZnO nanofibers (ZnO NFs) as raw material which has rarely been reported in previous papers. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) and transmission electron microscope's (TEM) images clearly indicated the existence of nanoparticles on the ZnO HS2 material. Both gas sensors exhibited high selectivity toward H2S gas over various other gases at 180 °C. The ZnO HS2 gas sensor exhibited higher H2S sensitivity response (50 ppm H2S, 42.298) at 180 °C than ZnO NFs (50 ppm H2S, 9.223) and ZnO HS1 (50 ppm H2S, 17.506) gas sensors. Besides, the ZnO HS2 sensor showed a shorter response time (14 s) compared with the ZnO NFs (25 s) and ZnO HS1 (19 s) gas sensors. The formation diagram of ZnO hierarchical structures and the gas sensing mechanism were evaluated. Apart from the synergistic effect of nanoparticles and nanoflowers, more point-point contacts between flower-like ZnO nanorods were advantageous for the excellent H2S sensing properties of ZnO HS2 material.

3.
Sensors (Basel) ; 16(10)2016 Oct 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27754321

ABSTRACT

For modern synthetic aperture radar (SAR), it has much more urgent demands on ground moving target indication (GMTI), which includes not only the point moving targets like cars, truck or tanks but also the distributed moving targets like river or ocean surfaces. Among the existing GMTI methods, displaced phase center antenna (DPCA) can effectively cancel the strong ground clutter and has been widely used. However, its detection performance is closely related to the target's signal-to-clutter ratio (SCR) as well as radial velocity, and it cannot effectively detect the weak large-sized river surfaces in strong ground clutter due to their low SCR caused by specular scattering. This paper proposes a novel method called relative residue of DPCA (RR-DPCA), which jointly utilizes the DPCA cancellation outputs and the multi-look images to improve the detection performance of weak river surfaces. Furthermore, based on the statistics analysis of the RR-DPCA outputs on the homogenous background, the cell average (CA) method can be well applied for subsequent constant false alarm rate (CFAR) detection. The proposed RR-DPCA method can well detect the point moving targets and distributed moving targets simultaneously. Finally, the results of both simulated and real data are provided to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed SAR/GMTI method.

4.
Sensors (Basel) ; 16(6)2016 Jun 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27314350

ABSTRACT

To realize ground moving target indication (GMTI) for a forward-looking array, we propose a novel synthetic aperture radar (SAR) system, called rotatable cross-track interferometry SAR (Ro-XTI-SAR), for squint-looking application in this paper. By changing the angle of the cross-track baseline, the interferometry phase component of squint-looking Ro-XTI-SAR caused by the terrain height can be approximately adjusted to zero, and then the interferometry phase of Ro-XTI-SAR is only sensitive to targets' motion and can be equivalent to the along track interferometry SAR (ATI-SAR). Furthermore, the conventional displaced phase center array (DPCA) method and constant false alarm (CFAR) processing can be used to accomplish the successive clutter suppression, moving targets detection and relocation. Furthermore, the clutter suppressing performance is discussed with respect to different system parameters. Finally, some results of numerical experiments are provided to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed system.

5.
Sensors (Basel) ; 16(3)2016 Mar 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26999140

ABSTRACT

To detect and estimate ground slowly moving targets in airborne single-channel synthetic aperture radar (SAR), a road-aided ground moving target indication (GMTI) algorithm is proposed in this paper. First, the road area is extracted from a focused SAR image based on radar vision. Second, after stationary clutter suppression in the range-Doppler domain, a moving target is detected and located in the image domain via the watershed method. The target's position on the road as well as its radial velocity can be determined according to the target's offset distance and traffic rules. Furthermore, the target's azimuth velocity is estimated based on the road slope obtained via polynomial fitting. Compared with the traditional algorithms, the proposed method can effectively cope with slowly moving targets partly submerged in a stationary clutter spectrum. In addition, the proposed method can be easily extended to a multi-channel system to further improve the performance of clutter suppression and motion estimation. Finally, the results of numerical experiments are provided to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed algorithm.

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