This thesis concerns methods to enhance current and explore future radiometric imaging systems for security screening. Its main focus is on the test and calibration procedures for the BorderWatch system – an established 33 GHz passive millimetre-wave imager developed by QinetiQ PLC as an outdoor security scanning portal for soft-sided heavy goods vehicles at ports of entry. The effects of the limited size of the sky background reflector of the operational system are addressed and modifications to mitigate these effects are proposed. Systematic diurnal and seasonal variations in the receiver output powers are characterised and strongly linked with variations in the physical temperature of the RF components. The proposed BorderWatch temperature calibration subsystem requires a reliable cold sky temperature reference point; the aim being to reduce the level of fixed pattern noise in present-day imagery and allow for post-processing methods requiring absolute temperature values. Cost considerations rule out independent millimetre-wave radiometers at each site so a proposed alternative is to use infra-red measurements as a proxy. A literature investigation is made into the millimetre-wave and infrared atmospheric opacities for a variety of meteorological conditions. The design, calibration and operation of a 35 GHz switching radiometer is described together with a comparison of the millimetre-wave radiometric brightness temperature measurements against the data from a low cost commercial infra-red sensor and from a nearby meteorological station. The results show an excellent correlation between the zenith sky temperatures in the infrared and millimetre-wave bands but only in clear sky conditions – as anticipated the presence of clouds affects the infra-red brightness distribution much more strongly than that of the millimetre-wave. Future security imagers may well incorporate interferometric arrays. An extensive simulation programme has been carried out to explore appropriate numbers of antennas and whether radio astronomy configurations and post-processing techniques can offer cost-effective routes to high image fidelity. The results of a quantitative analysis are promising and array configurations and techniques appropriate for potential future security imagers are suggested.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:664561 |
Date | January 2015 |
Creators | Taylor, Christopher Trevor |
Publisher | University of Manchester |
Source Sets | Ethos UK |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
Source | https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/enhancement-of-imagery-from-passive-millimetrewave-systems-for-security-scanning(7011ec7c-86ee-4770-b637-7ffe4909b241).html |
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