Enhanced detection and classification of buried mines with an UWB multistatic GPR
July 3, 2005
Conference Paper
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Published in:
IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society Int. Symp. 2005 Digest, Vol. 3B, 3-8 July 2005, pp. 88-91.
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Summary
In this paper we present a resonance-based classification technique for the identification of plastic-cased antipersonnel (AP) land mines buried in lossy and dispersive soils under rough surfaces by a stepped-frequency ultra-wideband (UWB) downward-looking ground penetrating radar (GPR) with an array of receivers. For this application the multistatic ground probing sensor is positioned just above the ground surface and operates from UHF to C-Band frequencies. Novel physics-based models based on the finite difference frequency domain (FDFD) technique simulate the characteristic resonating multi-aspect target frequency responses for several realistic buried land mine detection scenarios. Matched filter detection results are presented which assess the GPR's performance in identifying a simulated mine buried under a rough surface at varying depths in dry sand and a dispersive clay loam soil from other false targets such as buried rocks.