Abstract:
The detection of landmines is an important and challenging application for remote sensing technologies. The use of ground penetrating radar is an established technique bu...Show MoreMetadata
Abstract:
The detection of landmines is an important and challenging application for remote sensing technologies. The use of ground penetrating radar is an established technique but requires close coupling between the antennae and the ground and generally suffers from a poor area coverage rate. In order to clear mines rapidly along a route using a vehicle mounted system, a forward looking sensor is required that can operate effectively in a stand off configuration and detect surface laid, flush and buried mines. Reliable detection is required against a background of vegetation and other, surface and buried mines. Reliable detection is required against a background of vegetation and other, surface and buried, clutter. The Remote Minefield Detection System (REMIDS) is a technology demonstration programme funded by the UK Ministry of Defence designed to use an Ultra Wideband Synthetic Aperture Radar (UWBSAR) and a polarimetric infrared camera. The UWBSAR is a 3GHz bandwidth impulse radar with onboard data collection and offline image processing. The UWBSAR has been successfully trialled against landmines. Previous trials have mounted the radar on an airship and employed a conventional side-looking imaging geometry. In contrast, for the trials reported in this paper, the radar was amounted on a trolley to simulate a ground vehicle and operated in a forward-looking mode. The resulting use of an endfire synthetic aperture radar rather than the more conventional broadside aperture is the principal development reported in this paper. This coarsens the resolution and introduces a left-right ambiguity into the data. Previous trials have also highlighted the lack of a comprehensive data set containing controlled targets and a range of clutter conditions. The current trials were therefore conducted on a purpose built 80m test track which contained five different soil types, a range of surface conditions and over 200 targets of varying types and burial depth. The trials campaign collected...
Published in: IGARSS 2003. 2003 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium. Proceedings (IEEE Cat. No.03CH37477)
Date of Conference: 21-25 July 2003
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 10 May 2004
Print ISBN:0-7803-7929-2