| Literature DB >> 29867002 |
Yuanyuan Li1, Yaowen Fu2, Wenpeng Zhang3.
Abstract
In real applications, the image quality of the conventional monostatic Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar (ISAR) for the maneuvering target is subject to the strong fluctuation of Radar Cross Section (RCS), as the target aspect varies enormously. Meanwhile, the maneuvering target introduces nonuniform rotation after translation motion compensation which degrades the imaging performance of the conventional Fourier Transform (FT)-based method in the cross-range dimension. In this paper, a method which combines the distributed ISAR technique and the Matching Fourier Transform (MFT) is proposed to overcome these problems. Firstly, according to the characteristics of the distributed ISAR, the multiple channel echoes of the nonuniform rotation target from different observation angles can be acquired. Then, by applying the MFT to the echo of each channel, the defocused problem of nonuniform rotation target which is inevitable by using the FT-based imaging method can be avoided. Finally, after preprocessing, scaling and rotation of all subimages, the noncoherent fusion image containing all the RCS information in all channels can be obtained. The accumulation coefficients of all subimages are calculated adaptively according to the their image qualities. Simulation and experimental data are used to validate the effectiveness of the proposed approach, and fusion image with improved recognizability can be obtained. Therefore, by using the distributed ISAR technique and MFT, subimages of high-maneuvering target from different observation angles can be obtained. Meanwhile, by employing the adaptive subimage fusion method, the RCS fluctuation can be alleviated and more recognizable final image can be obtained.Entities:
Keywords: distributed ISAR; image fusion; maneuvering target; matching fourier transform; nonuniform rotation target
Year: 2018 PMID: 29867002 PMCID: PMC6022045 DOI: 10.3390/s18061806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Geometry of the distributed ISAR.
Figure 2The ith IPP.
Figure 3The rotation relationship of subimage.
Figure 4The complete processing chain.
Figure 5(a) Target model; (b) Echoes of all equivalent sensors.
Figure 6(a) Subimage by FT; (b) Subimage by MFT; (c) The profile of one range bin in (a); (d) The profile of one range bin in (b).
Figure 7(a–p) Subimages of sixteen observation angles.
Figure 8The fusion image.
The image entropies of subimages and final fusion image ( = 8 dB, ).
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| 5.6934 | 6.8958 | 5.9686 | 5.9141 | 5.8311 | 6.8305 |
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| 6.2674 | 5.4732 | 5.4162 | 5.3319 | 6.9425 | 6.8433 |
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| 5.8797 | 6.7876 | 5.5706 | 6.0895 | 5.4518 |
Figure 9The profile of one range bin in (a–c) Three corrected subimages; (d) the fusion image .
Figure 10The size and the shape of the conical target.
Figure 11The conical target (a–e) subimages from different observation angles; (f) The fusion image.
The image entropies of subimages and fusion image of the conical target.
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| 5.4906 | 5.0120 | 4.6289 | 4.5569 | 4.4304 | 4.1634 |