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This paper presents an imaging technique using the MUSIC algorithm to localize cylindrical reflectors in cross-borehole radar arrangements. Tomographic measurement, in which a transmitting and a receiving antenna are individually moved in separate boreholes, can be considered as a combination of a transmitting and a receiving array. A decorrelation technique with the transmitting array, which has been proposed for imaging point reflectors, is applied for imaging cylindrical reflectors using the MUSIC algorithm. Simulated and experimental results are shown to verify the validity of this algorithm for cylindrical targets. We analyze the evaluation error caused by the increase in the radius of the cylinder.
Takashi MIWA Yoshiyasu NAKANO Yoshiki YAMAKOSHI
A transmitting and receiving modulation MIMO radar system is effective to obtaining 3D resolution without a 2D array and to simplification of the electronic circuits in Tx and Rx array. But the dynamic range of the conventional system is limited by the interchannel interference of the used preferred pair M-sequence codes for Tx and Rx modulation. This paper presents a TRM-MIMO radar system based on orthogonal coded theory. We derive a condition which the Tx and Rx codes doubly modulated at the Tx and Rx arrays should satisfy. The acquisition time and code length is theoretically discussed. The experiments are carried out in order to demonstrate the effectiveness of this method by using a developed TRM-MIMO radar system with Hadamard codes. As the result, it is found that the proposed orthogonal code modulation method achieves more than 20 dB improvement of the dynamic range which is limited due to the interchannel interference of a moving clutter in a conventional system with M-sequence codes. Moreover, 5 times faster acquisition time is achieved.
Takashi MIWA Shun OGIWARA Yoshiki YAMAKOSHI
The importance of respiratory monitoring systems during sleep have increased due to early diagnosis of sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) in the home. This paper presents a simple respiratory monitoring system suitable for home use having 3D ranging of targets. The range resolution and azimuth resolution are obtained by a stepped frequency transmitting signal and MIMO arrays with preferred pair M-sequence codes doubly modulating in transmission and reception, respectively. Due to the use of these codes, Gold sequence codes corresponding to all the antenna combinations are equivalently modulated in receiver. The signal to interchannel interference ratio of the reconstructed image is evaluated by numerical simulations. The results of experiments on a developed prototype 3D-MIMO radar system show that this system can extract only the motion of respiration of a human subject 2 m apart from a metallic rotatable reflector. Moreover, it is found that this system can successfully measure the respiration information of sleeping human subjects for 96.6 percent of the whole measurement time except for instances of large posture change.
Takashi MIWA Shun OGIWARA Yoshiki YAMAKOSHI
Recently, it has become important to rapidly detect human subjects buried under collapsed houses, rubble and soil due to earthquakes and avalanches to reduce the casualties in a disaster. Such detection systems have already been developed as one kind of microwave displacement sensors that are based on phase difference generated by the motion of the subject's breast. Because almost all the systems consist of single transmitter and receiver pair, it is difficult to rapidly scan a wide area. In this paper, we propose a single-frequency multistatic radar system to detect breathing human subjects which exist in the area surrounded by the transmitting and receiving array. The vibrating targets can be localized by the MUSIC algorithm with the complex amplitude in the Doppler frequency. This algorithm is validated by the simulated signals synthesized with a rigorous solution of a dielectric spherical target model. We show experimental 3D localization results using a developed multistatic Doppler radar system around 250 MHz.