Sparsity-driven high resolution FDLFM-MIMO radar imaging

Author(s):  
Li Ding ◽  
Changchang Liu ◽  
Weidong Chen ◽  
Wenyi Zhang
Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 514
Author(s):  
Ha Hoang ◽  
Matthias John ◽  
Patrick McEvoy ◽  
Max J. Ammann

A calibration method for a high-resolution hybrid MIMO turntable radar imaging system is presented. A line of small metal spheres is employed as a test pattern in the calibration process to measure the position shift caused by undesired antenna effects. The unwanted effects in the antenna near-field responses are analysed, modelled and significantly mitigated based on the symmetry and differences in the responses of the MIMO configuration.


Author(s):  
Colin F. Wilson ◽  
Thomas Widemann ◽  
Richard Ghail

AbstractIn this paper, originally submitted in answer to ESA’s “Voyage 2050” call to shape the agency’s space science missions in the 2035–2050 timeframe, we emphasize the importance of a Venus exploration programme for the wider goal of understanding the diversity and evolution of habitable planets. Comparing the interior, surface, and atmosphere evolution of Earth, Mars, and Venus is essential to understanding what processes determined habitability of our own planet and Earth-like planets everywhere. This is particularly true in an era where we expect thousands, and then millions, of terrestrial exoplanets to be discovered. Earth and Mars have already dedicated exploration programmes, but our understanding of Venus, particularly of its geology and its history, lags behind. Multiple exploration vehicles will be needed to characterize Venus’ richly varied interior, surface, atmosphere and magnetosphere environments. Between now and 2050 we recommend that ESA launch at least two M-class missions to Venus (in order of priority): a geophysics-focussed orbiter (the currently proposed M5 EnVision orbiter – [1] – or equivalent); and an in situ atmospheric mission (such as the M3 EVE balloon mission – [2]). An in situ and orbital mission could be combined in a single L-class mission, as was argued in responses to the call for L2/L3 themes [3–5]. After these two missions, further priorities include a surface lander demonstrating the high-temperature technologies needed for extended surface missions; and/or a further orbiter with follow-up high-resolution surface radar imaging, and atmospheric and/or ionospheric investigations.


2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duncan A. Robertson ◽  
David G. Macfarlane

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bindong Gao ◽  
Fangzheng Zhang ◽  
Guanqun Sun ◽  
Shilong Pan

2014 ◽  
Vol 933 ◽  
pp. 450-455
Author(s):  
Hui Yu ◽  
Guang Hua Lu ◽  
Hai Long Zhang

The high resolution and better recovery performance with distributed MIMO radar would be significantly degraded when the target moves at an unknown velocity. In this paper, we propose an adaptive sparse recovery algorithm for moving target imaging to estimate the velocity and image jointly with high computation efficiency. With an iteration mechanism, the proposed method updates the image and estimates the velocity alternately by sequentially minimizing the norm and the recovery error. Numerical simulations are carried out to demonstrate that the proposed algorithm can retrieve high-resolution image and accurate velocity simultaneously even in low SNR.


Author(s):  
Helmut Rott ◽  
Donald W. Cline ◽  
Claude Duguay ◽  
Richard Essery ◽  
Pierre Etchevers ◽  
...  

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