Paper
15 April 2008 Sensing through the wall imaging using the Army Research Lab ultra-wideband synchronous impulse reconstruction (UWB SIRE) radar
Lam Nguyen, Marc Ressler, Jeffrey Sichina
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The U.S. Army Research Laboratory (ARL), as part of a mission and customer funded exploratory program, has developed a new low-frequency, ultra-wideband (UWB) synthetic aperture radar (SAR). The radar is capable of penetrating enclosed areas (buildings) and generating SAR imagery. This supports the U.S. Army's need for intelligence on the configuration, content, and human presence inside these enclosed areas. The radar system is mounted on a ground based vehicle traveling along the road and is configured with an array of antennas pointing toward the enclosed areas of interest. This paper will describe an experiment conducted recently at Aberdeen Proving Ground (APG), Maryland. In this paper we briefly describe the UWB SIRE radar and the test setup in the experiment. We will also describe the signal processing and the image techniques used to produce the SAR imagery. Finally, we will present SAR imagery of the building and its internal structure from different viewing directions.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Lam Nguyen, Marc Ressler, and Jeffrey Sichina "Sensing through the wall imaging using the Army Research Lab ultra-wideband synchronous impulse reconstruction (UWB SIRE) radar", Proc. SPIE 6947, Radar Sensor Technology XII, 69470B (15 April 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.776869
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CITATIONS
Cited by 42 scholarly publications and 9 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Radar

Buildings

Synthetic aperture radar

Antennas

Global Positioning System

Signal processing

Transmitters

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