Results 241 to 250 of about 19,438 (271)
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Passive bistatic radar (PBR) demonstrator
IET International Conference on Radar Systems 2007, 2007We present a system characterisation of a passive bistatic radar (PBR). The system under investigation exploits 'illuminators of opportunity', which in this case are commercial, non-cooperative, VHF FM broadcast transmissions. The paper demonstrates the detection of large passenger-jet aircraft over central London.
D. W. OHAGAN+3 more
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Bistatic synthetic aperture radar
RADAR 2002, 2003Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is becoming increasingly important in many military ground surveillance and targeting roles because of its ability to operate in all weather, day and night, and to detect, classify and geolocate objects at long stand-off ranges.
A.M. Horne, G. Yates
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New directions in bistatic radar
2008 IEEE Radar Conference, 2008It has been remarked that interest in the subject of bistatic radar has varied cyclically, with a period of about fifteen years. The very first radars were bistatic, until T/R switches were invented. Interest was revived in the 1950s/1960s, with semi-active homing missiles and the SPASUR system, then died away.
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Synchronisation of bistatic radar systems [PDF]
Bistatic radar is gaining more and more interest over the last years. It offers more freedom to deploy the transmitter and the receiver, e.g. in a way to enhance the signature of stealthy targets. Furthermore, the bi- or multistatic system can be realized without using expensive transmit/receive-modules.
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IRE Transactions on Aeronautical and Navigational Electronics, 1961
This paper briefly describes some of the characteristics, capabilities, and limitations of the bistatic radar when used for the detection and location of targets such as aircraft or satellites. (A bistatic radar is one in which the receiver is physically separated from the transmitter so that the echo signal does not travel over the same path as the ...
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This paper briefly describes some of the characteristics, capabilities, and limitations of the bistatic radar when used for the detection and location of targets such as aircraft or satellites. (A bistatic radar is one in which the receiver is physically separated from the transmitter so that the echo signal does not travel over the same path as the ...
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Television-based bistatic radar
IEE Proceedings F Communications, Radar and Signal Processing, 1986The paper discusses the use of `illuminators of opportunity' for bistatic radar systems. Experiments in the London area using the Crystal Palace transmitters are reported, including the use of TV pictures designed to make the transmission more closely resemble a pulsed radar signal.
Hugh Griffiths, N.R.W. Long
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Ambiguities in bistatic STAP radar
IGARSS 2000. IEEE 2000 International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium. Taking the Pulse of the Planet: The Role of Remote Sensing in Managing the Environment. Proceedings (Cat. No.00CH37120), 2002Space-time adaptive processing (STAP) is well-known for clutter suppression in monostatic radar with a multi-channel array antenna. Application to bistatic radar has been discussed recently by a few authors. The present author focuses on the effect of range and Doppler ambiguities that occurs in bistatic radar.
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Passive bistatic radar analysis
SPIE Proceedings, 2009Passive Bistatic Radar (PBR) research is at its zenith with several notable PBR systems currently operational, or available for deployment. Such PBRs include the Manastash Ridge Radar (MRR) developed for and by academia; Silent Sentry developed as a commercial concern by Lockheed Martin; and Homeland Alerter (HA100) also a commercial system ...
Daniel W. O'Hagan+2 more
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The nature of bistatic and multistatic radar
2001 CIE International Conference on Radar Proceedings (Cat No.01TH8559), 2002Bistatic and multistatic radar has some properties which are completely different from current monostatic radar. Some special properties that are closely related to tactical applications are derived. Through overall analysis, we believe that this will become one of the most important military radar systems.
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2007 IEEE International Conference on Ultra-Wideband, 2007
A new GPR system using an optical electric field sensor was proposed. The system has a bistatic radar configuration, which is consisted from a TEM horn antenna as a transmitter and an optical electric field sensor as a receiver. The new system employs a time-domain data acquisition, and it made the data acquisition very fast.
Motoyuki Sato, K. Yoshida
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A new GPR system using an optical electric field sensor was proposed. The system has a bistatic radar configuration, which is consisted from a TEM horn antenna as a transmitter and an optical electric field sensor as a receiver. The new system employs a time-domain data acquisition, and it made the data acquisition very fast.
Motoyuki Sato, K. Yoshida
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