A Method for Reducing Timing Jitter's Impact in Through-Wall Human Detection by Ultra-Wideband Impulse Radar

Ultra-wideband (UWB) impulse radar is widely used for through-wall human respiration detection due to its high range resolution and high penetration capability. UWB impulse radar emits very narrow time pulses, which can directly obtain the impulse response of the target. However, the time interval b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Remote sensing (Basel, Switzerland) Switzerland), 2021-09, Vol.13 (18), p.3577, Article 3577
Hauptverfasser: Shi, Cheng, Ni, Zhi-Kang, Pan, Jun, Zheng, Zhijie, Ye, Shengbo, Fang, Guangyou
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ultra-wideband (UWB) impulse radar is widely used for through-wall human respiration detection due to its high range resolution and high penetration capability. UWB impulse radar emits very narrow time pulses, which can directly obtain the impulse response of the target. However, the time interval between successive pulses emitted is not ideally fixed because of timing jitter. This results in the impulse response position of the same target not being fixed, but it is related to slow-time. The clutter scattered by the stationary target becomes non-stationary clutter, which affects the accurate extraction of the human respiration signal. In this paper, we propose a method for reducing timing jitter's impact in through-wall human detection by UWB impulse radar. After the received signal is processed by the Fast Fourier transform (FFT) in slow-time, we model the range-frequency matrix in the frequency domain as a superposition of the low-rank representation of jitter-induced clutter data and the sparse representation of human respiratory data. By only extracting the sparse component, the impact of timing jitter in human respiration detection can be reduced. Both numerical simulated data and experimental data demonstrate that our proposed method can effectively remove non-stationary clutter induced by timing jitter and improve the accuracy of the human target signal extraction.
ISSN:2072-4292
2072-4292
DOI:10.3390/rs13183577