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IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation
Volume 48 Number 9, September 2000
Table of Contents for this issue
Complete paper in PDF format
On the Use of Evanescent Electromagnetic
Waves in the Detection and Identification of Objects Buried in Lossy Soil
Glenn S. Smith, Fellow, IEEE and L. E. Rickard Petersson Student Member, IEEE
Page 1295.
Abstract:
In some electromagnetic (EM) systems proposed for the detection
of buried objects, such as landmines, the transducers (antennas) are located
very close to the surface of the earth. The coupling of energy into the earth
is then by the near field of the transducers, or, more precisely, by evanescent
waves as well as propagating waves in the spectrum for the radiation from
the transducers. Evanescent waves also contribute to the coupling of the scattered
field from the shallowly buried object to the transducers. In this paper,we use simple models based on a plane-wave spectral analysis to perform a
preliminary examination of the role that evanescent waves can play in the
detection and identification of the buried object. The degree to which features
in the image of the object can be resolved is of particular interest, since
the features can be used to distinguish the object from clutter (such as rocks).
The effect of loss in the soil on imaging is also of interest.
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