A microwave photonic prototype for concurrent radar detection and spectrum sensing over an 8 to 40 GHz bandwidth
In this work, a microwave photonic prototype for concurrent radar detection and spectrum sensing is proposed, designed, built, and investigated. A direct digital synthesizer and an analog electronic circuit are integrated to generate an intermediate frequency (IF) linearly frequency-modulated (LFM)...
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Zusammenfassung: | In this work, a microwave photonic prototype for concurrent radar detection
and spectrum sensing is proposed, designed, built, and investigated. A direct
digital synthesizer and an analog electronic circuit are integrated to generate
an intermediate frequency (IF) linearly frequency-modulated (LFM) signal with a
tunable center frequency from 2.5 to 9.5 GHz and an instantaneous bandwidth of
1 GHz. The IF LFM signal is converted to the optical domain via an intensity
modulator and then filtered by a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) to generate only two
2nd-order optical LFM sidebands. In radar detection, the two optical LFM
sidebands beat with each other to generate a frequency-and-bandwidth-quadrupled
LFM signal, which is used for ranging, radial velocity measurement, and
imaging. By changing the center frequency of the IF LFM signal, the radar
function can be operated within 8 to 40 GHz. In spectrum sensing, one 2nd-order
optical LFM sideband is selected by another FBG, which then works in
conjunction with the stimulated Brillouin scattering gain spectrum to map the
frequency of the signal under test to time with an instantaneous measurement
bandwidth of 2 GHz. By using a frequency shift module to adjust the pump
frequency, the frequency measurement range can be adjusted from 0 to 40 GHz.
The prototype is comprehensively studied and tested, which is capable of
achieving a range resolution of 3.75 cm, a range error of less than $\pm$ 2 cm,
a radial velocity error within $\pm$ 1 cm/s, delivering clear imaging of
multiple small targets, and maintaining a frequency measurement error of less
than $\pm$ 7 MHz and a frequency resolution of better than 20 MHz. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2406.14067 |