Proceedings Volume 7670

Passive Millimeter-Wave Imaging Technology XIII

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Proceedings Volume 7670

Passive Millimeter-Wave Imaging Technology XIII

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Volume Details

Date Published: 23 April 2010
Contents: 5 Sessions, 20 Papers, 0 Presentations
Conference: SPIE Defense, Security, and Sensing 2010
Volume Number: 7670

Table of Contents

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Table of Contents

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  • Front Matter: Volume 7670
  • Imaging Systems I
  • Imaging Systems II
  • Phenomenology
  • Devices
Front Matter: Volume 7670
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Front Matter: Volume 7670
This PDF file contains the front matter associated with SPIE Proceedings Volume 7670, including the Title Page, Copyright information, Table of Contents, and the Conference Committee listing.
Imaging Systems I
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A microwave imaging spectrometer for security applications
Matthias Jirousek, Markus Peichl, Helmut Suess
In recent years the security of people and critical infrastructures is of increasing interest. Passive microwave sensors in the range of 1 - 100 GHz are suitable for the detection of concealed objects and wide-area surveillance through poor weather and at day and night time. The enhanced extraction of significant information about an observed object is enabled by the use of a spectral sensitive system. For such a spectral radiometer in the microwave range also some depth information can be extracted. The usable frequency range is thereby dependent on the application. For through-wall imaging or detection of covert objects such as for example landmines, the lower microwave range is best suited. On the other hand a high spatial resolution requires higher frequencies or instruments with larger physical dimensions. The drawback of a large system is the required movement of a mirror or a deflecting plate in the case of a mechanical scanner system, or a huge amount of receivers in a fully-electronic instrument like a focal plane array. An innovative technique to overcome these problems is the application of aperture synthesis using a highly thinned array. The combination of spectral radiometric measurements within a wide frequency band, at a high resolution, and requiring a minimum of receivers and only minor moving parts led to the development of the ANSAS instrument (Abbildendes Niederfrequenz-Spektrometer mit Apertursynthese). ANSAS is a very flexible aperture synthesis technology demonstrator for the analysis of main features and interactions concerning high spatial resolution and spectral sensing within a wide frequency range. It consists of a rotated linear thinned array and thus the spatial frequency spectrum is measured on concentric circles. Hence the number of receivers and correlators is reduced considerably compared to a fully two-dimensional array, and measurements still can be done in a reasonable time. In this paper the basic idea of ANSAS and its setup are briefly introduced. Some first imaging results showing the basic capabilities are illustrated. Possible error sources and their impacts are discussed by simulation and compared to the measured data.
Passive millimeter wave imaging and spectroscopy system for terrestrial remote sensing
Nachappa Gopalsami, Shaolin Liao, Eugene R. Koehl, et al.
We have built a passive millimeter wave imaging and spectroscopy system with a 15-channel filter bank in the 146-154 GHz band for terrestrial remote sensing. We had built the spectroscopy system first and have now retrofitted an imaging element to it as a single pixel imager. The imaging element consisted of a 15-cm-diameter imaging lens fed to a corrugated scalar horn. Image acquisition is carried out by scanning the lens with a 2-axis translation stage. A LabVIEW-based software program integrates the imaging and spectroscopy systems with online display of spectroscopic information while the system scans each pixel position. The software also allows for integrating the image intensity of all 15 channels to increase the signal-to-noise ratio by a factor of ~4 relative to single channel image. The integrated imaging and spectroscopy system produces essentially 4-D data in which spatial data are along 2 dimensions, spectral data are in the 3rd dimension, and time is the 4th dimension. The system performance was tested by collecting imaging and spectral data with a 7.5-cm-diameter and 1m long gas cell in which test chemicals were introduced against a liquid nitrogen background.
Real-time passive terahertz imaging system for standoff concealed weapons imaging
Arttu Luukanen, Leif Grönberg, Markus Grönholm, et al.
The performance of stand-off imaging systems of concealed weapons in the mm-wave range remains limited by the relatively poor angular resolution using practical aperture sizes. For this reason, increasing the operating frequency of the systems is desired, but in practice is hard to realize due to the lack of affordable, low noise amplifiers well beyond 100 GHz. In this paper we present a passive terahertz imaging system which acquires passive terahertz (~200 GHz - ~1 THz) imagery near video frame rate. The system, one copy of which is built in Finland and the other in the U.S., is based on a 64 pixel linear array of superconducting antenna-coupled microbolometers operated within a commercial cryogen-free closed cycle cryocooler, and utilizes conical scanning Schmidt optics. Quantitative measurements on the imager resolution metrics (thermal, spatial and temporal) will be presented. The results from field tests at the Helsinki-Vantaa airport will be presented.
Progress report on Safe VISITOR: approaching a practical instrument for terahertz security screening
Erik Heinz, Detlef Born, Gabriel Zieger, et al.
As reported before,1, 2 Safe VISITOR (Safe VISible, Infrared and Terahertz Object recognition) is a German project to build a passive security camera which visualizes sub-mm wavelengths using cooled bolometer arrays. This camera could be used for a variety of application scenarios, such as airport screenings or to protect military camps. In all cases, a practical instrument requires ease of use, in particular a flexible installation and a straightforward usage by the security personnel. Here we present a new generation of Safe VISITOR designed to meet these requirements. The main condition for an effective operation is a high frame rate of the imager. Safe VISITOR is able to record videos up to 10 Hz, using a small array of superconducting bolometers in combination with an opto-mechanical scanner. The required cooling of the detector array is provided by a commercial pulse tube cooler with a second, self-contained cooling stage. The cooling cycle is completely automated; after 10 hours of initial cooling from room temperature the system can operate quasi-continuously. For imaging, a 50 cm diameter optics is used which is able to provide an object resolution of approximately 1.5 cm at 8 m distance. For a flexible installation, the object distance can be tuned manually between 7 and 10 m. Additionally, video streams from two commercial cameras are fused with the sub-mm stream: a CCD for visible light and a microbolometer for far infrared (14 μm). This combines the ability of identification of the person under test with the unprecedented temperature resolution at infrared and the almost perfect transmission at sub-mm. To assist a security official, all image data are displayed in various graphic renditions by a unified system software.
Status of VESAS: a fully-electronic microwave imaging radiometer system
Present applications of microwave remote sensing systems cover a large variety. One utilisation of the frequency range from 1 - 300 GHz is the domain of security and reconnaissance. Examples are the observation of critical infrastructures or the performance of security checks on people in order to detect concealed weapons or explosives, both being frequent threats in our world of growing international terrorism. The imaging capability of concealed objects is one of the main advantages of microwave remote sensing, because of the penetration performance of electromagnetic waves through dielectric materials in this frequency domain. The main physical effects used in passive microwave sensing rely on the naturally generated thermal radiation and the physical properties of matter, the latter being surface characteristics, chemical and physical composition, and the temperature of the material. As a consequence it is possible to discriminate objects having different material characteristics like ceramic weapons or plastic explosives with respect to the human body. Considering the use of microwave imaging with respect to people scanning systems in airports, railway stations, or stadiums, it is advantageous that passively operating devices generate no exposure on the scanned objects like actively operating devices do. For frequently used security gateways it is additionally important to have a high through-put rate in order to minimize the queue time. Consequently fast imaging systems are necessary. In this regard the conceptual idea of a fully-electronic microwave imaging radiometer system is introduced. The two-dimensional scanning mechanism is divided into a frequency scan in one direction and the method of aperture synthesis in the other. The overall goal here is to design a low-cost, fully-electronic imaging system with a frame rate of around one second at Ka band. This frequency domain around a center frequency of 37 GHz offers a well-balanced compromise between the achievable spatial resolution for a given size, and the penetration depth of the electromagnetic wave, which are conflictive requirements.
Millimeter-wave radar for brown-out landings using passive imager components
Christopher A. Martin, Vladimir Kolinko, John A. Lovberg
A millimeter-wave radar designed for landing helicopters in brown-out conditions is described and data is presented from an initial flight test. The radar operates in a frequency modulated continuous wave architecture, determining range to target by calculating the difference between transmitted and returned frequencies. The millimeter-wave frequency band provides sand and dust penetration and allows for small apertures appropriate for helicopter mounting. This radar also uses a flat panel phased-array receive antenna and phase processor to sample multiple antenna beams simultaneously, an architecture that has previously been successfully used in passive millimeter-wave imaging systems. The radar presents a wide field-of-view image to the operator at a 3 Hz frame rate where range to the ground and obstacles is depicted in grayscale. The flight test showed the radar to be capable of depicting terrain height variations and obstacles such as buildings, vehicles, building materials, and even power lines. Reductions in noise and symbology improvements are necessary developments for a viable landing system.
Imaging Systems II
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Standoff concealed weapon detection using a 350-GHz radar imaging system
David M. Sheen, Thomas E. Hall, Ronald H. Severtsen, et al.
The sub-millimeter (sub-mm) wave frequency band from 300 - 1000 GHz is currently being developed for standoff concealed weapon detection imaging applications. This frequency band is of interest due to the unique combination of high resolution and clothing penetration. The Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) is currently developing a 350 GHz, active, wideband, three-dimensional, radar imaging system to evaluate the feasibility of active sub-mm imaging for standoff detection. Standoff concealed weapon and explosive detection is a pressing national and international need for both civilian and military security, as it may allow screening at safer distances than portal screening techniques. PNNL has developed a prototype active wideband 350 GHz radar imaging system based on a wideband, heterodyne, frequency-multiplier-based transceiver system coupled to a quasi-optical focusing system and high-speed rotating conical scanner. This prototype system operates at ranges up to 10+ meters, and can acquire an image in 10 - 20 seconds, which is fast enough to scan cooperative personnel for concealed weapons. The wideband operation of this system provides accurate ranging information, and the images obtained are fully three-dimensional. During the past year, several improvements to the system have been designed and implemented, including increased imaging speed using improved balancing techniques, wider bandwidth, and improved image processing techniques. In this paper, the imaging system is described in detail and numerous imaging results are presented.
Indirect holographic imaging: evaluation of image quality at 310 GHz
A. Tamminen, J. Ala-Laurinaho, A. V. Räisänen
We present an active THz-imaging technique, which utilizes holographic process in image retrieval. In this technique, information of the target is stored in an interference pattern. The pattern is formed with a reference field and a field reflected from the target. This technique, called indirect holographic imaging, involves only amplitude detection. The image of the target is formed computationally from the complex field given by the holographic process. An experimental imaging system operated at 310 GHz is described. Millimeter-wave images of different targets are presented. The imager performance is described with image signal-to-noise ratio and noise equivalent reflectivity difference, as well as with the cross-range resolution. The indirect holographic imaging method is assessed with variable system signal-to-noise ratios. A knife-edge method is utilized to approximate the point spread function of the imaging system. Cross-range resolution of 0.18° and noise equivalent reflectivity level of 0.002 is achieved with an experimental imager at 310 GHz with 40-cm aperture.
Sparse sampling and enhanced axial resolution in millimeter-wave holographic imaging
Christy Fernandez-Cull, David A. Wikner, Michael Mattheiss, et al.
This paper describes an active millimeter-wave (MMW) holographic imaging system used for the study of compressive measurement for concealed weapons detection. We record a digitized on-axis, Gabor hologram using a single pixel incoherent receiver that is translated at the detector plane to form an image composite. Capturing measurements in the MMW regime can be costly since receiver circuits are expensive and scanning systems can be plagued by their long data acquisition times. Thus, we leverage recent advances in compressive sensing with a traditional holographic method in order to estimate a 3D (x,y,z) object distribution from a 2D recorded image composite. To do this, we minimize a convex quadratic function using total variation (TV) regularization. Gabor holograms are recorded of semi-transparent objects, in the MMW, mimicking weapons and other objects. We present preliminary results of 3D reconstructions of objects at various depths estimated from a 2D recorded hologram. We compare backpropagation results with our decompressive inference algorithm. A possible application includes remote concealed weapons detection at security checkpoints.
Performance limitations of compressive sensing for millimeter wave imaging
Jonathan Lynch, Roy Matic, Joshua Baron
The authors present an analysis of compressive sensing (CS) as applied to millimeter wave and optical imaging systems, showing that the technique inherently reduces detection efficiency due to reflection and diffraction effects of the underlying electromagnetics. The results show that single-detector imaging approaches that rely on simultaneous detection of multiple spatial modes (i.e., image pixels) require an electrically large detector to maintain high detection efficiency.
Phenomenology
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Millimeter wave measurements of explosives and simulants
Devices using electromagnetic (EM) waves in the GHz range are evolving rapidly. The advancement of this technology for security applications, such as explosives detection and personnel screening, requires an understanding of the optical properties of various materials. Using terahertz time-domain spectroscopy and free space millimeter-wave measurements, the dielectric constant of explosives have been measured. Methods used to standardize the experimental measurement and characterize the EM/material interaction are described. These results have enabled the development of mixtures of benign substances as simulants for testing. A comparison of the anticipated signal returns are presented for the range 100 - 500 GHz for a limited set of explosives and simulants.
Emission from dielectric materials at millimeter wavelengths in passive thermal environments
The brightness of radiation escaping a two-dimensional slab of material under ambient illumination is characterized in terms of its complex dielectric constant. Transmission and reflection coefficients derive from wave optics and the application of Beer's law; the emissivity follows from detailed balancing using Kirchoff's law. The solutions are compared with intensities measured with a commercial millimeter wave imaging system. The results show that millimeter wave imaging of semi-transparent materials can be described by optical physics based on dielectric material properties. In addition, analysis of millimeter wave images of materials could provide information about their dielectric properties.
Body-borne IED detection: NATO DAT#10 BELCOAST 09 demonstration results
Naomi Alexander, Ignacio Gómez, Isabel Ortega, et al.
Belgium leads the tenth initiative in the CNAD Programme of Work for the Defense Against Terrorism (PoW DAT), dealing with Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP). The BELCOAST 09 event, comprising a series of technology demonstrations, was organized to tackle the need for an event that brings together the operational, armaments and technological communities in the field of CIP. A counter terrorism scenario has been created: Terrorist with body-borne IED approaching the entrance of an installation, and a millimeter-wave imager's ability to detect IEDs has been demonstrated. The results of this scenario-based demonstration are presented in this paper.
Image registration and fusion of MMW and visual images for concealed object detection
This paper addresses the registration and the fusion techniques between passive millimeter wave (MMW) and visual images for concealed object detection. The passive MMW imaging system detects concealed objects such as metal and man-made objects as well as small liquid and gel containers. The registration and fusion processes are required to combine information from both of visual and MMW images. The registration process is composed of feature extraction and matching stages. The body areas in two images are adjusted to each other in scale, rotation, and location. The image fusion method is based on discrete wavelet transform and a fusion rule, which emphasizes the person's identity and the hidden object together. The experimental and simulation results show the proposed technique can detect a concealed object and fuse two different types of images in a fully automated way.
Active THz inspection of water content in plants
D. Etayo, J. C. Iriarte, I. Palacios, et al.
The THz range offers the possibility of measuring water content. This can be useful in wine industry to control plants water levels and also to decrease irrigation costs. This paper presents a THz imaging system used to characterise water content in leaves using frequency and time domain methods from 0.14 to 0.22 THz. Our results show the possibility of getting useful information out of the preformed measurements.
Devices
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A sub-millimeter wave line imaging device
In this paper we present a single mode active device for sub-millimeter wave line imaging. The illuminated scene is imaged through focusing optics onto a device we have developed and have dubbed a spatially selective mask (SSM). This device transmits parts of the image onto a heterodyne receiver. Currently the SSM is capable of transmitting user-selectable parts of one line of the image that is focused on it. Multiple patterns are used to sample a line in the image. The voltage in the receiver resulting from each pattern constitutes an independent measurement of the illuminated scene along a line. A one dimensional image is reconstructed from the measurement results and a priori knowledge of the patterns using methods derived from the theory of compressive sensing. The theory behind the device and the design principles we use are reviewed. We show line images obtained at 640 GHz. Extension of this technique to two dimensional imaging is discussed.
A 350-GHz high-resolution high-sensitivity passive video imaging system
Daniel Becker, James Beall, Hsiao-Mei Cho, et al.
We are developing a 350 GHz cryogenic passive video imaging system. This demonstration system uses 800 photon-noise-limited superconducting transition edge sensor bolometers. It will image a 1 m x 1 m area at a standoff distance of 16 m to a resolution of approximately 1 cm at video frame rates (20 frames per second). High spatial resolution is achieved by the use of an f/2.0 Cassegrain optical system with 1.3 m primary mirror. Preliminary testing of prototype detectors indicates that we can achieve a noise equivalent temperature difference (NETD) of 70 mK for the fully sampled 1 m × 1 m image at 20 frames per second.
A fully-integrated W-band imaging receiver IC in silicon-germanium BiCMOS technology
Leland Gilreath, Vipul Jain, Hsin-Cheng Yao, et al.
A fully-integrated silicon-based 94-GHz direct-detection imaging receiver with on-chip Dicke switch and baseband circuitry is demonstrated. Fabricated in a 0.18-μm SiGe BiCMOS technology (fT/fMAX = 200 GHz), the receiver chip achieves a peak imager responsivity of 43 MV/W with a 3-dB bandwidth of 26 GHz. A balanced LNA topology with an embedded Dicke switch provides 30-dB gain and enables a temperature resolution of 0.3-0.4 K. Initial imaging measurements using the chip along with off-chip antennas are also presented. The imager chip consumes 200 mW from a single 1.8-V power supply.
Orotron-based sub-millimeter-wave source
Stergios J. Papadakis, Joan A. Hoffmann, Andrew H. Monica, et al.
We describe progress towards an Oroton-based sub-millimeter-wave source with a design frequency of 500 GHz. Key features of the devices are a microfabricated, carbon nanotube field-emission-based electron gun which creates a sheet-beam at the required current density without the need for beam compression, and a microfabricated Smith-Purcell grating, and a uniform Z-direction magnetic field confinement.