1 / 48

Interferometric Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar (InISAR)

Interferometric Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar (InISAR). Logan Smith EECS 826 4/30/09. Contents. ISAR review InISAR Overview Registration 3D InISAR Applications Automatic Carrier Landing System Automatic Target Identification. ISAR.

reya
Télécharger la présentation

Interferometric Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar (InISAR)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Interferometric Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar(InISAR) Logan Smith EECS 826 4/30/09

  2. Contents • ISAR review • InISAR • Overview • Registration • 3D InISAR • Applications • Automatic Carrier Landing System • Automatic Target Identification

  3. ISAR • ISAR measures the rotation of a moving target in two dimensions as it moves in the radars field of view. • This results in an high resolution image that is a 2D plane with the axes of slant range and cross range • Slant range resolution dependent on transmitted signal’s pulse compression characteristics • Cross range resolution dependent on the Doppler bandwidth of the returned signal [2]

  4. ISAR • ISAR is an inversion of Spotlight Mode SAR • Typically used for marine or aircraft monitoring • Does not provide height information [1]

  5. Contents • ISAR review • InISAR • Overview • Registration • 3D InISAR • Applications • Automatic Carrier Landing System • Automatic Target Identification

  6. InISAR • Requirements: • 2 or more antennas, each recording ISAR data • Coherent radar • Pixel registration • Motion Compensation • Large baseline = fine resolution • Baseline too large  Baseline de-correlation • Only used in single-pass mode. No uses yet for a long temporal baseline

  7. Terrain vs Vehicle • InISAR is similar to InSAR (also called a phase-comparison monopulse radar) used to find terrain height/elevation • Vehicle heights much smaller than terrain or building height/elevation • No continuous phase. Uses corner reflectors [4] [3]

  8. Registration [5] • Goal: To obtain the maximum allowable cross range resolution without de-correlating the two ISAR images • Solution: Use two sets of antenna • Smaller baseline antennas to measure angle • Larger baseline antennas for imaging • Avoids the need for phase unwrapping

  9. Registration • Procedure: • Step 1: Remove target’s radial motion and calculate its range profile • Step 2: Find angular value of each range cell • Step 3: Use the smaller baseline data to obtain the scattering-center’s Doppler history • Step 4: Use this result to fit the time-variant curve of the pitching and azimuth angles • These results can be used to calibrate the longer baseline results, removing ambiguity and returning a high resolution phase history

  10. Registration Simulation • Center frequency = 10GHz • Bandwidth = 400MHz • Image processing time = 1.17s • Small baseline = 0.5m • Large baseline = 1.0m • Initial slant range = 10km • Pitching angle = 30° • Azimuth angle = 45° • Target speed = 300m/s

  11. Registration Simulation Before compensation After compensation

  12. Simulation Results

  13. 3D InISAR [6] • Uses three antenna configuration • Avoids need for radar to follow target • Can be used to image fast moving space objects (e.g. satellites) • Estimates radial velocity of target • Receiver/Transmitter A: (0,0,0) • Receiver B: (L,0,0) • Receiver C: (0,0,-L)

  14. Contents • ISAR review • InISAR • Overview • Registration • 3D InISAR • Applications • Automatic Carrier Landing System • Automatic Target Identification

  15. InISAR for Aircraft Carrier AALS [7] • Aug 12th, 1957: 1st successful landing using an automatic carrier landing system (F3D Skyknight on the USS Antietam) • “Look Ma No Hands” Patch from Bell Aerosystems [8]

  16. Simulation Scenario • Short-range ISAR approximations fail to adequately measure aircraft motion • ISAR resolution not sufficient to detect small angular changes • InISAR used to detect slight roll or pitch with near 90 deg squint angle. • No contiguous structure so no phase unwrapping methods used for terrain • 13 strong corner reflectors were used to track phase • Imaging done in the ω-k (frequency-wavenumber)

  17. Radars offset from runway by 15m (Range, X1) • Start data collection when plane is 500m away (Cross-range, Y1) • Antennas are 1m apart (Height, Z1) • Squint Angle:

  18. Simulation Parameters • Two antennas • Antenna one acts as transmitter and receiver • Antenna two acts as receiver • Both aircraft and carrier have GPS information to correct for nonlinear motion • Center frequency: fc = 33 GHz • Bandwidth: BW = 40 MHz • Aircraft veloctiy: v = 100 m/s • Slow-time sampling interval = [-1.5,1.5] (s) • Synthetic aperture length: L = 150 m

  19. Phase delays: assuming

  20. Aircraft reflectivity function:

  21. Resolution Wavenumber: Illuminated aspect angles: Wavenumber bandwidth: Resolution: Δxs = 0.25m Δy = 4m Δz = 0.22m

  22. Rotation • Measures the pitch and roll of the aircraft

  23. ө = 0 • φ = 0 • Level flight

  24. ө = 3 • φ = 0 • Rolling to the side

  25. ө = 0 • φ = 5 • Pitched forward

  26. ө = 3 • φ = 5 • Pitched and rolling

  27. Effects of Rotation • Assuming small ө and φ: Aircraft’s nose: -1.1 rad, y=8m, z=0 Φ = 5.7° Wing reflector: 0.75 rad, (-1,-1,-0.5) ө = 3.25°

  28. Conclusions • InISAR can be used to detect irregularities in a landing aircraft’s orientation • Compare measured phases with database of safe landing orientations • Does not use pattern matching since that would be impractical for such variable weather conditions

  29. InISAR for Automatic Target Identification [8] • Goal: Airborne or shipborne long range early warning automatic classification of Non-Cooperative and Stealthy Target (NCST) entity. • NCST: 1) Enhanced Information Extraction (EIE) 2) Absolute Decision Formation (ADF)

  30. Enhanced Information Extraction • ISAR for resolution in range • Radio Frequency Interferometry (RFI) for resolution in angle • Looking for attributes to assess: • Ship class: abstract information • Ship name: distinct information

  31. KMS Bismarck • Inspired by historic case of mistaken identity • HMS Ark Royal attacked HMS Sheffield while looking for KMS Bismarck

  32. Radar Specs [#] • fc = 5 GHz • BW = 34.25 Hz • PRF = 1000 Hz • Transmitted waveform • Cross Range Resolution • 26.786m • Slant Range Resolution • 8 m

  33. Model Geometry • Radar waves interpolated to a rectangular grid

  34. ISAR contribution • ISAR image processing using 2D DFT

  35. ISAR results • Strong reflectors at lower heights will be stretched, creating a distorted outline of the ship

  36. RFI contribution • Radio Frequency Interferometry angle tracking • Looking for single scatterers in a resolution cell

  37. Glint • Multiple scatterers in a resolution cell • Most variation in transversal components with height dimension remaining stable

  38. InISAR results • ISAR provides map of dominate scatterers • InSAR provides accurate height values • Results are better when the tracked scatterer is near the highest point of the ship • Can also analyze the absolute Doppler of the dominant scatterer • Higher speeds = higher points on the superstructure

  39. Target Identification • Neural network compares ISAR and InSAR results and scales the results based on training rules

  40. Moving Ground Targets [9] • Using InISAR to image moving targets against a stationary background • Target and background separated and processed separately (target with InISAR and background with InSAR) • Three-antenna configuration: (0,0,0);(0,ly,0);(0,0,lz)

  41. Ground Target Simulation Spotlight SAR • fc, BW, ly, lz, R0 same • Incident angle: α = 10° • Velocity of radar: • Va = 150m/s • Velocity of target: • Vt =20m/s • L = 300m • Angle between Vt and x-axis • Β = 45° • Imaging time T = 2s Stripmap SAR • fc = 10GHz • BW = 300MHz • ly = lz = 0.5m • Antennas: • Planer antennas • antenna length = 1m • Distance from origin to target: R0 = 10km • Incident angle: α = 90° • Velocity: V = 200m/s • Relative velocity of radar to target • L = 150m

  42. Simulation Data 2D ISAR images with Conventional processing 2D ISAR images with added clutter Clutter removed using delay-line techniques

  43. Ground Target Results Original Stripmap SAR with clutter Spotlight SAR without clutter

  44. Summary • InISAR is a combination of ISAR and InSAR • It adds height information and more accurate phase information to the ISAR data • Can be used to extract profile information about moving objects in land, sea, or air • Subject to glint phenomena • Still in research/simulation stage

  45. Questions

  46. References • [1] SKOLNIK 2001 Introduction to Radar Systems.New York : McGraw Hill. (ISBN 0-07-118189-X) • [2] Kostis, Theodoros G. (2001) Interferometric Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar. Unpublished master’s thesis, University of London • [3] http://earth.esa.int/workshops/ers97/papers/thiel/Image90.gif • [4] Soumekh, Mehrdad. Automatic Aircraft Landing Using Interferometric inverse synthetic Aperture Radar Imaging. in IEEE Trans. Image Processing, vol. 5, no. 9, Sept. 1996. • [5] Zhang, Q. Novel registration technique of InISAR and InSAR. in IEEE Int. Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium. Vol. 1 July 2003. • [6] Zhang, Dongchen. Three-dimensional ISAR Imaging of High Speed Space Target in 9th Intl. Conf. on Signal Processing. 26-29 Oct. 2008. • [7] Kostis T.G., Baker C.J., Griffiths H.D. (2006), An Interferometric ISAR System Model for Automatic Target Identification, Proceedings of the European Conference on Synthetic Aperture Radar 2006, London, England, no. 58. • [8] www.tsretirees.org/memory/Femiano.doc • [9] Zhang, Qun. Three-Dimensional SAR Imaging of a Ground Moving Target Using the InISAR Technique. in IEEE Trans. Geoscience and Remote Sensing. Vol 42. no. 9 Sept. 2004.

More Related