Spatially variant autofocus for circular synthetic aperture sonar

Abstract

Circular synthetic aperture sonar (CSAS) is a method for improving the resolution and target detection capabilities of a synthetic aperture sonar system. CSAS data are difficult to focus because of their large aperture sizes and elevation sensitivity. This difficulty has sometimes been addressed by using transponders or distributing isotropic scatterers in the field of view of the system; however, this comes at the cost of reduced practicality. As an alternative, map-drift based multipoint autofocus (“multilateration”) was proposed by Cantalloube and Nahum [IEEE Trans. Geosci. Remote Sens. 49, 3730–37 (2011)] for autofocusing analogous circular synthetic aperture radar data. Multilateration also solves the problem of aberration spatial variance by providing a three-dimensional navigation correction. In circular synthetic aperture focusing problems, though, correcting aberrations is a joint navigation and elevation estimation problem, and the present work extends the multilateration approach to simultaneously solve both a navigation solution and coordinate corrections for the multilateration control patches. Additionally, methods for addressing the stability and behavior of the inverse problem are addressed, and an adaptive weighting scheme for reducing the influence of outliers is presented. The field results demonstrate near optimal point-spread functions on distributions of natural isotropic scatterers and robustness in regions with bathymetric variability.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jun 01, 2021
Source ID
10.1121/10.0005198

Entities

People

  • Jermaine Kennedy
  • Timothy Marston

Organizations

  • Naval Surface Warfare Center
  • Office of Naval Research
  • Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program
  • University of Washington

Tags

Readers

  • Adaptive Control and Estimation with Uncertainty in Dynamic Systems.
  • Image Processing and Computer Vision.
  • Radar Systems Engineering.