Location and recognition of discontinuities in dielectric media using synthetic RF pulses
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RF pulses are used in radar and sonar to detect and locate targets in extended media. Short RF pulses (and impulses) can be used to find buried objects or voids by echo sounding, or can be used to probe snow fields or the depths of the earth. Although similar to radar in principle, there are important differences in these applications that can lead to significant variations in the design approach. A novel system is described, with a computer-programmed tunable RF source, that tunes rapidly through all the frequencies of a nanosecond pulse spectrum, makes individual "CW" measurements, stores them, and finally computes a synthetic echo. Target signatures can be "recognized" by calculating correlation functions. Experimental results are presented.
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