Abstract

In microwave imaging, it is often of interest to inspect electrically large spatial regions. In these cases, data must be collected over a great deal of measurement points which entails long measurement time and/or costly, and often unfeasible, measurement configurations. In order to counteract such drawbacks, we have recently introduced a microwave imaging algorithm that looks for the scattering targets in terms of equivalent surface currents supported over a given reference plane. While this method is suited to detect shallowly buried targets, it allows one to independently process all frequency data, and hence the source and the receivers do not need to be synchronized. Moreover, spatial data can be reduced to a large extent, without any aliasing artifacts, by properly combining single-frequency reconstructions. In this paper, we validate such an approach by experimental measurements. In particular, the experimental test site consists of a sand box in open air where metallic plate targets are shallowly buried a (few ) under the air/soil interface. The investigated region is illuminated by a fixed transmitting horn antenna, whereas the scattered field is collected over a planar measurement aperture at a fixed height from the air-sand interface. The transmitter and the receiver share only the working frequency information. Experimental results confirm the feasibility of the method.

Highlights

  • Published: 29 July 2021Microwave imaging, and in general radar imaging, is a mature research field that finds application in a number of different contexts where pursuing non-destructive investigation is convenient or mandatory [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11].Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) is a radar system that is properly conceived to address non-destructive imaging

  • GPRs work in contact with the interface between the air and the medium under investigation

  • GPRs mounted on a flying platform [12,13]

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Summary

Introduction

Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) is a radar system that is properly conceived to address non-destructive imaging. GPRs work in contact with the interface between the air and the medium under investigation. There is great interest in achieving target detection through non-contact measurement layouts, for example, with. GPRs mounted on a flying platform [12,13]. Stand-off distance configurations allow for the investigation of regions that are not (or safely) accessible, as it happens, for instance, when one has to deal with mine or unexploded device detection [14]. A flying GPR can allow for inspecting large areas quickly [15,16]

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