Topics Beyond Syllabus

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 4

TOPIC BEYOND THE SYLLABUS

Course Name: RADAR SYSTEMS(C411)

LIDAR - Light Detection and Ranging


INTRODUCTION:
The development of laser technology over 50 years ago led to the creation of light detection
and ranging (LIDAR) systems that delivered a breakthrough in the way distances are
calculated. The principles of LIDAR are much the same as those used by radar. The key
difference is that radar systems detect radio waves that are reflected by objects while LIDAR
uses laser signals. Both techniques usually employ the same type of time-of-flight method to
determine an object’s distance. However, as the wavelength of laser light is much shorter
than that of radio waves, LIDAR systems deliver superior measurement accuracy. LIDAR
systems can also examine other properties of the reflected light, such as the frequency content
or polarization, to reveal additional information about the object.
LIDAR systems are now being employed in an ever-increasing variety of applications. This
includes, but is not limited to, autonomous driving, geological and geographical mapping,
seismology, meteorology, atmospheric physics, surveillance, altimetry, forestry, navigation,
vehicle tracking, surveying, and environmental protection. Lidar Configuration To match the
many different applications, LIDAR systems come in a wide range of designs and
configurations. Each system requires suitable optical to electrical sensors and appropriate
data acquisition electronics. The light detection system is either incoherent, where direct
energy is measured by amplitude changes in the reflected signals, or coherent, where shifts in
the reflected signal’s frequency, such as those caused by a Doppler Effect, or its phase are
observed. Similarly, the light source can be a low power micro-pulse design, where
intermittent pulse trains are transmitted, or a high energy one.
Micro-pulse systems are ideal for applications where “eye-safe” operation is essential (such
as in surveying and ground-based vehicle tracking), while the high-energy systems are
typically deployed where long distances and low-level reflections are to be encountered (like
in atmospheric physics and meteorology studies). Each LIDAR system needs to use an
appropriate sensor to detect the reflected laser signals and convert them into an electrical
signal. The most common sensor types are photomultiplier tubes (PMT’s) and solid-state
photodetectors (such as photodiodes). In general, PMT’s are used in applications where
visible light is employed while photodiodes are more common in infrared systems. However,
both sensor types are widely used, and the choice depends largely on the light characteristics
that need to be detected, the performance level required and the cost. Most importantly the
sensors produce fast electrical signals that need to be acquired and analysed.
For most LIDAR applications, the most popular form factor for a signal capture card is PCIe
as this enables them to be installed directly inside most modern PCs. PCIe is a form factor
supplied my many digitizer vendors. It’s a simple way to create a powerful, easy-to-use, data
acquisition system. As the PCIe bus delivers very high data throughput rates, the functions of
signal acquisition, data transfer and analysis are typically much faster than those of other,
more conventional, acquisition systems. Some vendors like Spectrum Instrumentation also
supply industry standards such as the digitizer NETBOX, a compact LXI/Ethernet-based
device or PXIe, which are a good choice for moving environments with space restrictions or
vibration issues such as in airborne or mobile LIDAR.

LIDAR PERFORMANCE CLASSES:


For LIDAR applications, there are three separate performance classes:

FOR THE FASTEST LIGHT PULSES:


For the capture and analysis of very fast signals, a card would need sampling rates up to 5
GS/s and a high bandwidth of more than 1 GHz. An example for such a digitizer is the
Spectrum Instrumentation 22xx series which offers up to 4 channels per card on PCIe and
PXIe platforms or up to 24 channels on an LXI platform. This combination makes the cards
ideal for working with fast sensors that produce pulses that are in the nanosecond or even
sub-nanosecond ranges. Furthermore, a fast 5 GS/s sampling rate enables timing
measurements with sub-nanosecond resolution. It’s ideal for situations where small frequency
shifts, such as those produced by a Doppler Effect, need to be detected and measured.

FOR LOW LEVEL SIGNALS AND HIGH SENSITIVITY:


When wide signal dynamic range and very high sensitivity is needed, a card needs to be able
to acquire signals with amplitudes that go down into the millivolt range with sampling rates
of a few hundred MS/s and a matching bandwidth. Vertical resolution needs to be high; 16
bits are preferred. An example is the Spectrum M4i.44xx series with 14-bit resolution at 500
MS/s or 16-bit resolution at 250 MS/s. These units also have programmable full scale gain
ranges, from ±200 mV to ±10 V, making them suitable for applications where low-level
signals and small amplitude variations need to be observed and measured.

FOR COST EFFECTIVE MID-RANGE PERFORMANCE:


The third group is for applications that need high sensitivity but have less demanding timing
requirements. Sampling Rates of up to 100 MS/s and 16-bit vertical resolution, like
Spectrum’s M2p.59xx series offers, fit into this application area. These units are used in long-
range LIDAR applications where high signal sensitivity is essential and for situations where
highdensity, multi-channel recording is required.

ADVANCED DIGITIZER FEATURES TO LOOK FOR IN LIDAR


APPLICATIONS:
Digitizers include several different acquisition modes that enable the efficient use of the
digitizer’s on-board memory and deliver ultrafast triggering capabilities, so that no important
events are missed. These modes include Multi- and Gated- acquisitions, complete with time
stamping, FIFO streaming or FPGA-based high speed Block Averaging.

HOW TO HANDLE THE HUGE AMOUNTS OF DATA:


The first method simply sends the data to the CPU of a host PC. This conventional approach
provides an easy solution. Users can write their own analysis programs based on the vendor’s
API, or use third party measurement software like SBench6, MATLAB and LabVIEW. The
overall performance and measurement speed is then limited by the CPU’s available
resources. In demanding applications, it is a problem, as the CPU shares its processing power
with the rest of the PC system, as well as controlling the data transfer. The second approach
uses FPGA technology - Field Programmable Gate Array. This is a powerful solution but it
comes with a much higher cost and complexity. Large FPGAs are expensive and, creating
custom firmware, requires an FDK for the digitizer, tools from the FPGA vendor, and
specialized hardware programming engineering skill. Creating firmware isn’t for everyone
and even experienced developers can get bogged down in long development cycles.
Furthermore, the solution is limited by the FPGA that is on the digitizer. For example, if the
available block RAM is exhausted, there’s nothing more that can be done. The third
approach, created by Spectrum Instrumentation, is new. Called SCAPP, it uses a standard off-
the-shelf GPU – Graphics Processor Unit – that is based on Nvidia’s CUDA standard. The
GPU connects directly with the digitizer without CPU interaction.
This opens the huge parallel core architecture of the GPU for signal processing with hundreds
or even thousands of processing cores, memories of several Gigabytes and calculation speeds
of up to 12 TeraFLOP. The structure of a CUDA card works perfectly for analysis as it is
designed for parallel data processing. This makes it ideal for tasks such as data conversion,
digital filtering, averaging, baseline suppression, FFT window functions or even FFTs
themselves as they are easily handled in parallel. For example, a small GPU with 1k cores
and 3.0 Tera-FLOP calculating speed is already capable of doing continuous data conversion,
multiplexing, windowing, FFT and averaging at 500 Mega Samples per Second on two
channels with an FFT block size of 512k – and it can run for hours. Comparing the SCAPP
approach to an FPGA-based solution reveals a big saving in the Total Cost of Ownership. All
that is required is a matching CUDA GPU and the software development kit. However, the
largest cost saver is project development time. Instead of spending weeks trying to
understand a supplier’s FDK, the structure of the FPGA firmware, the FPGA design suite and
the simulation tools, the user can start immediately by working with examples written in
easy-to-understand C-Code and using common design tools.
OPTICAL RADAR

Optical radar, also called lidar, which stands for light detection and ranging, operates
similarly to microwave radar. In its basic form, it employs a pulsed laser, the beam of which
is directed to the atmospheric sample that is to be probed. Energy backscattered by the
atmosphere is sensed by a photodetector. The resulting signal is processed as a function of
time from the transmission of the pulse, just as in a radar ranging system. Generally, lidar
systems have relied on Mie scattering, due to particulate material and aerosols, to provide the
backscattered light. Thus, lidar is most useful for determining concentrations of particulate
material, and it gives no information about gas concentrations. Lidar has most often been
used for measurements in which concentrations of particulates or aerosols are desired. It can
determine concentration as a function of distance from the measurement position.

Figure 20-4 presents what is perhaps a typical example of a lidar measurement. The results
are derived from laser backscattering from the emission of an 800-foot-high smokestack. The
figure shows the range-corrected signal in decibels relative to that from the ambient
background aerosols. The contours represent relative particulate concentration in a vertical
cross section of the emission from the smokestack. The example shows clearly how lidar can
provide information about particulate concentration that would otherwise be difficult to
obtain. The measurement may easily be performed remotely. Lidar can also measure
quantities like stratification, flow, and changing profiles of turbid layers in the atmosphere.

Note:
Above topics (beyond the syllabus) are mapped to PO1,PO4,PSO1

You might also like