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IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation
Volume 47 Number 12, December 1999
Table of Contents for this issue
Complete paper in PDF format
Land Mine Detection Using a
Ground-Penetrating Radar Based on
Resistively Loaded Vee Dipoles
Thomas P. Montoya, Member, IEEE, and Glenn S. Smith, Fellow, IEEE
Page 1795.
Abstract:
Resistively loaded Vee dipoles are considered for use in a
short-pulse ground penetrating radar (GPR) used to detect buried
antipersonnel land mines. First, a study is made to select a short pulse
to radiate that is most appropriate for the problem. A simple
one-dimensional (1-D) analysis of some representative soils and a land
mine is used to select a radiated pulse similar in shape to a
differentiated Gaussian pulse with a spectral peak at 4 GHz. Based on
previous studies, the conductivity of the arms of the Vee dipole is
linearly tapered from the feed to the open ends. A fully
three-dimensional (3-D) finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) model is
developed and used to simulate the GPR land mine detection problem.
Using this model, a resistively loaded Vee dipole is selected and
evaluated. Parametric studies related to the problem are conducted
including: varying the height of the Vee above the ground, varying the
position of the land mine both laterally and in depth, and examining the
effects of the geometry of the land mine on the received signal.
Environmental conditions are examined including signal returns from
rocks and variations in the shape of the surface of the ground. The FDTD
results are validated by comparisons with experimental data. These
studies demonstrate that resistively loaded Vee dipoles can greatly
reduce clutter related to the antenna, making the task of distinguishing
land mines (targets) much easier.
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