We present the design and field test results for a 600 to 900 MHz polarimetric ice penetrating radar that can be operated on the ground or from an airborne platform. This system is part of a development to build a dual band (VHF/UHF) polarimetric ice sounding radar suite. The VHF radar operates over 140-215 MHz and is essentially a modified version of the multi-channel 3D imaging system reported in [1]. The UHF radar, the focus of this work, is an adaptation of the CReSIS Accumulation Radar, which operates from 600 to 900 MHz [2]. The radar system uses a custom-designed, dual-polarized 4x4 antenna array with increased peak and average transmit power levels, which together provide additional sensitivity with respect to prior system renditions. The UHF radar incorporates a new receiver [3] that uses controlled analog compression via RF limiters to increase the instantaneous dynamic range. We designed the instrument setup to be towed by snowmobiles and operated at nominal speeds of 4 to 8 m/s. The relatively slow motion helps improve SNR through an increase in coherent averaging due to the longer dwell time. Although the focus of the field test is on ground-based work, the electronics are designed to also support airborne operation.
more »
« less
Decompression-Based Receiver Design for Radar Ice Sounding Applications
This work describes the design and development of a radar receiver with a large dynamic range by means of carefully designed compression. The receiver is designed for ice sounding applications on the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets and is designed to be usable over a large frequency range (VHF and UHF) and with multiple analog-to digital converters with only minor modifications. We present the receiver design, in which we have implemented an RF-power limiting feature so that the output power is monotonically increasing with respect to the input power over a large dynamic range. This allows the receiver to operate in the nonlinear region to compress the high-power returns into the dynamic range of the analog to digital converter while still achieving good sensitivity (low noise figure) for low power signals. We discuss design considerations, hardware description, initial lab test results, the architecture of the design and results from recent field deployments. Lastly, we discuss the future work on the decompression mechanism to recover the uncompressed signals.
more »
« less
- PAR ID:
- 10579257
- Publisher / Repository:
- IEEE
- Date Published:
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 211 to 214
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
Millimeter-wave (mmWave) communications and cell densification are the key techniques for the future evolution of cellular systems beyond 5G. Although the current mmWave radio designs are focused on hybrid digital and analog receiver array architectures, the fully digital architecture is an appealing option due to its flexibility and support for multi-user multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO). In order to achieve reasonable power consumption and hardware cost, the specifications of analog circuits are expected to be compromised, including the resolution of analog-to-digital converter (ADC) and the linearity of radio-frequency (RF) front end. Although the state-of-the-art studies focus on the ADC, the nonlinearity can also lead to severe system performance degradation when strong input signals introduce inter-modulation distortion (IMD). The impact of RF nonlinearity becomes more severe with densely deployed mmWave cells since signal sources closer to the receiver array are more likely to occur. In this work, we design and analyze the digital IMD compensation algorithm, and study the relaxation of the required linearity in the RF-chain. We propose novel algorithms that jointly process digitized samples to recover amplifier saturation, and relies on beam space operation which reduces the computational complexity as compared to per-antenna IMD compensation.more » « less
-
We propose and experimentally demonstrate an optical pulse sampling method for photonic blind source separation. The photonic system processes and separates wideband signals based on the statistical information of the mixed signals, and thus the sampling frequency can be orders of magnitude lower than the bandwidth of the signals. The ultra-fast optical pulses collect samples of the signals at very low sampling rates, and each sample is short enough to maintain the statistical properties of the signals. The low sampling frequency reduces the workloads of the analog to digital conversion and digital signal processing systems. In the meantime, the short pulse sampling maintains the accuracy of the sampled signals, so the statistical properties of the under-sampled signals are the same as the statistical properties of the original signals. The linear power range measurement shows that the sampling system with ultra-narrow optical pulse achieves a 30dB power dynamic range.more » « less
-
The onset of quantum computing calls for secrecy schemes that can provide everlasting secrecy resistant to increased computational power of an adversary. One novel physical layer scheme proposes that an intended receiver capable of performing analog cancellation of a known key-based interference would hold a significant advantage in recovering small underlying messages versus an eavesdropper performing cancellation after analog-to-digital conversion. This advantage holds even if an eavesdropper later obtains the key and employs it in their digital cancellation. Inspired by this scheme, a flexible software-defined radio receiver design capable of maintaining analog cancellation ratios over 40 dB, reaching up to and over 50 dB, is implemented. Using analog cancellation levels from the hardware testbed, practical everlasting secrecy rates up to 2.0 bits/symbol are shown to be gained by receivers performing interference cancellation in analog rather than on a digital signal processor.more » « less
-
Dynamic spectrum access relies fundamentally on the ability to tune radio transceivers to frequencies that are deemed to be available. Consequently, radio hardware must support tuning over a wide range of frequencies. For the receiver, this precludes the use of fixed frontend filters to reject out-of-band interfering signals. Instead, widely tunable receivers rely on filtering after down-conversion either at IF or baseband. This approach relies on linearity and an ideal mixer to keep the desired signal and interfering signals separated. However, practical receivers exhibit non-linearity, phase noise, and oscillator spurs that cause mixing of the signal of interest and interfering signals. As a result, portions of the interfering signals may appear in the band of the desired signal; this causes interference that cannot be mitigated by filtering. Synthetic diversity mitigates this problem by combining analog and digital processing techniques. In the analog domain, the wide-band RF signal is passed through a passive, lossless multi-port diversity network. Each output from this network is then down-converted and digitized so that multiple versions of the signal are available at digital baseband. As the desired signal and the interfering signals experience different frequency response as they pass through the diversity network, it is possible to employ beam forming methods in digital baseband processing to mitigate the interfering signals while preserving the desired signal. The performance of the proposed synthetic diversity receiver is analyzed and it is shown that excellent interference rejection can be achieved. Rejection performance can be increased even further when the circuit elements in the diversity network can be adapted.more » « less
An official website of the United States government

