scispace - formally typeset
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Method of measuring Doppler shift of moving targets using FMCW maritime radar

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the Doppler shift of a moving target was measured using a two-dimensional complex valued matrix (CVM) whose spectral peak correspond to the position of the moving target.
Abstract
During the operation of an FMCW (frequency modulated continuous wave) maritime radar, the system transmits a continuous radio energy with a frequency modulated by a triangular or sawtooth-shaped signal. As a result, the frequency of the transmitted signal varies gradually with time. When the signal is reflected by an object, the received waveform will build up a delayed replica of the transmitted waveform, with the time delay as a measure of the target range. If the target is moving, the radar system will register a Doppler shift within the received signal. Compared to the frequency of the emitted signal, the received signal will show a higher frequency when the target is approaching and a lower frequency when the target is moving away from the radar location. Thus, the total Doppler shift may result from the superposition of both source and observer motions. Specifically, the amount of Doppler shift is directly proportional to the radial speed of the target. The Doppler shift can be determined after performing the range Fourier transform (range FFT) first. For a target of interest, we can repeat the range FFT until we have enough data to perform the second level of FFT. The result of this second FFT is a two dimensional complex valued matrix, whose spectral peak corresponds to the Doppler shift of the moving target. This method is known as Doppler FFT. Some results of the measurement of target speed using this method are presented in this paper.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Research on a Simulation Method of the Millimeter Wave Radar Virtual Test Environment for Intelligent Driving.

TL;DR: This study addresses the virtual testing of intelligent driving, examines the key problems in modeling and simulating millimeters wave radar environmental clutter, and proposes a modeling and simulation method for the environmental clutter of millimeter wave radar in intelligent driving.
Patent

Radial speed acquisition method and radial speed acquisition device based on vehicle close-proximity radar

Fang Shuyang
TL;DR: In this article, a radial speed acquisition method based on vehicle close-proximity radar is proposed, which consists of following steps: after acquiring a rising edge spectrum signal and a falling edge intermediate-frequency receiving signal of a triangular wave signal of vehicle close proximity radar, respectively, the correlation degree between the two signals has been calculated.
Book ChapterDOI

Simulation of a Frequency-Modulated Continuous-Wave (FMCW) Radar Using Fast Fourier Transforms (FFT)

TL;DR: Frequency-modulated continuous-wave radar systems send known frequency signals to moving targets and receive the signal back to detectors, which can be used to measure exact heights of landing aircrafts and in early warning radar systems and in proximity sensors.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Moving Target Imaging for Synthetic Aperture Radar Via RPCA

TL;DR: In this article, a rank-1 and sparse decomposition framework for synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imaging of moving targets is presented. But the authors focus on the image domain and do not consider the trajectory of the moving targets.
References
More filters
Book

Introduction to Radar Systems

TL;DR: This chapter discusses Radar Equation, MTI and Pulse Doppler Radar, and Information from Radar Signals, as well as Radar Antenna, Radar Transmitters and Radar Receiver.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

INDRA: The Indonesian Maritime Radar

TL;DR: This paper introduces INDRA, the first maritime radar built in Indonesia, a solid-state FMCW radar developed in 2 versions, i.e. a ship/marine radar and a coastal radar.

Software design to simulate FMCW radar signal: a case study of INDERA

TL;DR: The research group at the Radar and Communication Systems has developed a software system that can be utilized not only to generate and analyze the FMCW radar signal, but also to reconstruct the received radar signal onto a PPI (Plan Position Indicator) radar display.
Related Papers (5)