Paper
23 May 2011 Synthetic aperture acoustic imaging of canonical targets with a 2-15 kHz linear FM chirp
Joseph F. Vignola, John A. Judge, Chelsea E. Good, Steven S. Bishop, Peter M. Gugino, Mehrdad Soumekh
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Synthetic aperture image reconstruction applied to outdoor acoustic recordings is presented. Acoustic imaging is an alternate method having several military relevant advantages such as being immune to RF jamming, superior spatial resolution, capable of standoff side and forward-looking scanning, and relatively low cost, weight and size when compared to 0.5 - 3 GHz ground penetrating radar technologies. Synthetic aperture acoustic imaging is similar to synthetic aperture radar, but more akin to synthetic aperture sonar technologies owing to the nature of longitudinal or compressive wave propagation in the surrounding acoustic medium. The system's transceiver is a quasi mono-static microphone and audio speaker pair mounted on a rail 5meters in length. Received data sampling rate is 80 kHz with a 2- 15 kHz Linear Frequency Modulated (LFM) chirp, with a pulse repetition frequency (PRF) of 10 Hz and an inter-pulse period (IPP) of 50 milliseconds. Targets are positioned within the acoustic scene at slant range of two to ten meters on grass, dirt or gravel surfaces, and with and without intervening metallic chain link fencing. Acoustic image reconstruction results in means for literal interpretation and quantifiable analyses. A rudimentary technique characterizes acoustic scatter at the ground surfaces. Targets within the acoustic scene are first digitally spotlighted and further processed, providing frequency and aspect angle dependent signature information.
© (2011) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Joseph F. Vignola, John A. Judge, Chelsea E. Good, Steven S. Bishop, Peter M. Gugino, and Mehrdad Soumekh "Synthetic aperture acoustic imaging of canonical targets with a 2-15 kHz linear FM chirp", Proc. SPIE 8017, Detection and Sensing of Mines, Explosive Objects, and Obscured Targets XVI, 80170E (23 May 2011); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.882547
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KEYWORDS
Acoustics

Synthetic aperture radar

Scanners

Neodymium

Current controlled current source

Fermium

Frequency modulation

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