Traditional data collects of high priority targets require immense planning and resources. When novel operating conditions (OCs) or imaging parameters need to be explored, typically synthetic simulations are leveraged. While synthetic data can be used to assess automatic target recognitions (ATR) algorithms; some simulation environments may inaccurately represent sensor phenomenology. To levitate this issue, a scale model approach is utilized to provide accurate data in a laboratory setting. This work demonstrates the effectiveness of a resource cognizant approach for collecting IR imagery suitable to assessing ATR algorithms. A target of is interest is 3D printed at 1/60th scale with a commercial printer and readily available materials. The printed models are imaged with a commercially available IR camera in a simple laboratory setup. The collected imagery is used to test ATR algorithms when trained on a standard IR ATR dataset; the publicly available ARL Comanche FLIR dataset. The performance of the selected ATR algorithms when given sampled of scale model data is compared to the performance of the same algorithms when using the provided measured data.
With the development of airborne synthetic aperture radar (SAR) measurement techniques, 3D SAR image formation has become prevalent in the SAR community. Conventional backprojection algorithms have difficulty mapping scatters to a voxel grid in 3D space due to a myriad of differential ranges in the height dimension. The inaccurate mapping of range profiles is commonly seen in layover defects. To address this issue while using limited sensor aspects, this study utilizes tomographic techniques. Interferometric SAR is leveraged to yield height estimate surfaces and applied to the 3D backprojection images as a spatial filter. Fusion across a swath of aspects in azimuth for a fixed elevation bin are utilized to resolve shadowed and non-resolved features in the surface reconstructions. Height estimations are applied to the 3D image grid corresponding to the range and cross-range voxels. Multiple height estimate algorithms are studied and yield results on a feature level basis of targets accurate within inches for X-Band synthetically generated data.
Reconstructing 3D data of objects from limited SAR imagery is of interest due to SARs ability to actively sense targets from a far stand-off range. SAR imagery is non-literal and may not capture the same features as a passive EO camera. However, EO imagery has been shown to be a promising candidate for low-view 3D reconstruction. Thus, a common technique for SAR 3D reconstruction is to first translate a SAR image to an EO image. The structural similarity (SSIM) metric has been shown to be an effective loss function in the techniques used to translate SAR to EO. However, SSIM has several components that can be tuned to achieve optimal performance. This work addresses (i) the parameterization of SSIM for the SAR to EO translation problem and (ii) the ability to reconstruct 3D objects from SAR images after said translations. A parametric sweep is conducted to find optimal parameterization on several matched SAR and EO datasets.
KEYWORDS: Synthetic aperture radar, Education and training, Scattering, Light sources and illumination, Data modeling, Sensors, Performance modeling, 3D modeling, Point clouds, Electroluminescence
Image-to-image translation methods aim to convert an image from its native source domain to a target domain. This is a common technique when the target domain’s phenomenology is more amenable to a certain task than the source domain. An example of this practice is Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) to electro-optical (EO) translation for 3D reconstruction. Techniques in 3D reconstruction have been shown to be effective on EO imagery. A common practice is to translate SAR imagery to the EO domain in order to form 3D reconstructions from SAR imagery. The translation algorithms ultimately map specular SAR responses to diffuse EO responses. While previous work supports the effectiveness of deep neural networks for such a translation, the black-box nature of the trained models does not offer explainability towards the effectiveness of the SAR to EO translations. This work aims to offer explainability for SAR to EO translations via direct comparison of facet responses found in ray-tracing based simulations given equivalent target and sensor geometry. Further analysis of these target responses is conducted in order to understand scenarios where SAR to EO translations is expected to be effective and ineffective.
An algorithm is presented for synthesizing mathematical models of terrain elevation and re ectivity from digital elevation terrain data (DTED) and national land cover data (NLCD). Assuming the DTED and NLCD have spatial intersection, it is straightforward to interpolate each set individually to a common set of coordinates in the intersection. However, DTED is continuous and NLCD is not typically which results in different and sometimes contrasting sampling requirements of the intersecting region. This study evaluates different similarity measures used to assess the quality of re-sampling DTED and NLCD data for the purpose of building elevation and reflectivity profiles for physical optics calculation of site-specific radar clutter. Examples of the algorithm are presented for clutter scene generation with the Raider Tracer prediction tool.
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