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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Short-Range Target Tracking Using High-Resolution Automotive Radars

Chen, Ming January 2024 (has links)
There is growing interest in the application of high-resolution radars in autonomous vehicles due to their affordability and high angular resolution. However, the azimuth ambiguity caused by the large physical distance between radar antennas relative to the signal wavelength is a challenge for its application. The problem of multiple extended target tracking using high-resolution radar measurements with azimuth ambiguity is considered. A novel pseudo-3D assignment (P3DA) method based on the pseudo measurement set (PMS) is proposed to resolve the azimuth ambiguity. This method can resolve mono (single) and split (duplicated) azimuth ambiguities common in extended target tracking. The Lagrangian relaxation based on a flexible search (LR-FS) algorithm is proposed to solve the P3DA-PMS problem efficiently. Simulation and experiment results show that the proposed algorithm outperforms conventional methods that do not address the azimuth ambiguity of extended target tracking. Since data association with only one data frame will lose information about target evolution and cannot change an association later based on subsequent measurements, a novel two-step multiframe assignment method is proposed to resolve split and azimuth ambiguity separately. In the first step, the split ambiguity is resolved by the PMS-to-PMS association, resulting in a merged PMS (MPMS). In the second step, the azimuth ambiguity is resolved by the Track-to-MPMS association. Numerical results show that the proposed method performs better than the P3DA-PMS-based method. The vehicles tracking with high-resolution radars need to provide information about their orientation and shape to achieve lidar-like performance. Due to self-occlusion, the L-shape model is frequently utilized to depict the structure of a typical vehicle. Since the measurement accuracy of high-resolution radars is not as high as that of lidars, radar measurement noise cannot be ignored. Moreover, as a side effect of using large wavelengths, multiple measurements may be produced per time step due to multipath effects. As a result, more outliers and inliers can be generated in high-resolution radar measurements. A novel lognormal likelihood-aided L-shape model is proposed to approximate the distribution of high-resolution radar measurements of vehicles. Numerical results evaluated on simulation data and the KITTI dataset show that the proposed algorithm achieves smaller orientation and position errors and larger generalized intersection over union (GIoU) compared to existing L-shape fitting algorithms for lidar measurements. / Dissertation / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
2

Battle damage assessment using inverse synthetic aperture radar (ISAR)

Lim, Kian Guan 12 1900 (has links)
Approved for public release; distribution in unlimited. / An imaging radar, like ISAR, offers a combatant the capability to perform long range surveillance with high quality imagery for positive target identification. Extending this attractive feature to the battle damage assessment problem (BDA) gives the operator instant viewing of the target's behavior when it is hit. As a consequence, immediate and decisive action can be quickly taken (if required). However, the conventional Fourier processing adopted by most ISAR systems does not provide adequate time resolution to capture the target's dynamic responses during the hit. As a result, the radar image becomes distorted. To improve the time resolution, time-frequency transform (TFT) methods of ISAR imaging have been proposed. Unlike traditional Fourier-based processing, TFT's allows variable time resolution of the entire event that falls within the ISAR coherent integration period to be extracted as part of the imaging process. We have shown in this thesis that the use of linear Short Time-Frequency Transforms allows the translational response of the aircraft caused by a blast force to be clearly extracted. The TFT extracted images not only tell us how the aircraft responds to a blast effect but also provides additional information about the cause of image distortion in the traditional ISAR display.

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