Advances in Radar Technologies
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Volume 2014, Article ID 818369, 2 pages
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/818369
Editorial
Advances in Radar Technologies
Sandra Costanzo,1 Alvaro Rocha,2 and Marcelo Sampaio de Alencar3
1
Dipartimento di Ingegneria Informatica, Modellistica, Elettronica e Sistemistica, Università della Calabria, 87036 Rende, Italy
Universidade Europeia & Universidade do Porto, LIACC, Portugal
3
Federal University of Campina Grande, Campina Grande, PB, Brazil
2
Correspondence should be addressed to Sandra Costanzo;
Received 21 November 2013; Accepted 21 November 2013; Published 9 January 2014
Copyright © 2014 Sandra Costanzo et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution
License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly
cited.
“As first shown by Hertz, electric waves can be completely reflected by conducting bodies. In some of my
tests I have noticed the effects of reflection and detection of these waves by metallic objects miles away”
(Gugliemo Marconi, Radio Telegraphy, Proc. Inst. Radio Eng., vol. 10, 1922)
. . .the history of RADAR technology in Italy begun. . .
The Navy Officer (later on Professor at University of Pisa) Ugo Tiberio made a theoretical
study on the detection of objects by electromagnetic waves and developed the radar equation
(Ugo Tiberio, “Misura di distanze per mezzo di onde ultracorte (Radiotelemetria),”
Alta Frequenza, Maggio 1939, Torino, Italy)
Even after a century of research and study in the field,
radar systems with enhanced features are in high demand
for surveillance, tracking, and imaging applications, required
for both civilian and military contexts. Advanced radar
technologies are needed to face the problem of complex
environments, with changing electromagnetic properties of
targets, such as vehicles, ships, buildings, and terrain, for different frequencies, polarimetric modes, and configurations.
This special issue collects 12 papers from 37 authors
belonging to different countries and institutions. It summarizes the most recent developments and ideas on emerging
radar technologies, with particular focus addressed to the
following issues:
(i) compressive sensing applied to large array diagnosis,
directions-of-arrival estimation, and through-thewall imaging,
(ii) software defined radar approach,
(iii) flexible, multimode radar solutions,
(iv) radar data processing techniques,
(v) compact and broadband antennas useful for sounder
and imager radar,
(vi) usage of micro-Doppler radar signals for human
detection,
(vii) circulating codes in space-time radar waveforms,
(viii) mitigation techniques for interference from a similar
radar.
In the paper by S. Costanzo et al. entitled “Radar array
diagnosis from undersampled data using a compressed sensing/sparse recovery technique”, the problem of large arrays
diagnosis is faced by adopting an equivalent sparse formulation to accurately detect fault elements from undersampled
data.
M. Carlin et al. in the paper “Bayesian compressive sensing
as applied to directions-of-arrival estimation in planar arrays”
2
adopted a probabilistic version of compressive sensing which
is successfully applied for estimating the directions of arrival
of multiple electromagnetic signals impinging on planar
arrays.
The paper by E. Cristofani et al. entitled “Performance
of 2D compressive sensing on wide-beam through-the-wall
imaging” explores the application of compressive sensing to
minimize the amount of data required for accurate reconstructions of through-the-wall imaging scenes.
In the paper by S. Costanzo et al., entitled “High resolution
software defined radar system for target detection,” a software
defined approach is proposed to design a compact and lowcost L-band software defined radar system which is useful for
landslides monitoring.
The same approach is adopted in the paper by S. Costanzo
et al. entitled “Multiband software defined radar for soil discontinuities detection,” which uses an orthogonal frequencydivision multiplexing technique to perform the dielectric
characterization of multilayer structures, such as soils with
dispersive features.
The paper by S. Costanzo et al. entitled “Multimode/
multifrequency low frequency airborne radar design” presents
the design of a flexible and low cost airborne radar that is
able to easily switch between two different operational modes,
namely, a sounder or SAR imager.
In the paper by A. R. Laganà et al. entitled “Modeling
and processing L-band ground based radar data for landslides
early warning,” the approaches commonly used in SAR data
processing for deformations imaging are generalized to the
case of ground-based, nonsynthetic radar operating in the Lband.
In the paper by F. Venneri et al. entitled “Tunable reflectarray cell for wide angle beam-steering radar applications,”
an electronically tunable reflectarray element is presented to
design beam-steering arrays suitable for radar applications.
In the paper by S. Costanzo and A. Costanzo entitled
“Compact U-slotted antenna for broadband radar applications,” a modified U-shaped microstrip patch antenna with
reduced size and broadband features is presented to be
usefully applied for low-frequency penetrating radar.
In the paper by D. Tahmoush and J. Silvious entitled
“Radar measurement of human polarimetric micro-doppler,”
extensive polarimetric micro-Doppler walking signatures are
collected and analyzed to reveal different characteristics of
human motions.
The paper by G. Babur et al. entitled “Space-Time radar
waveforms: circulating codes” describes a novel solution to
transmit only one waveform circulating from one antenna
element to another (or from one subarray to another) with
a very small relative time shift.
In the paper by G. Galati and G. Pavan entitled “Noise
radar technology as an interference prevention method,” mitigation techniques based on waveform diversity supplied by
Noise Radar Technology are discussed to face the problem of
interferences from several similar radar systems operating in
a small environment with limited allocated bandwidths, such
as in the marine radar context.
The focus theme treated in this special issue owns a
particular multidisciplinary feature, so it is able to attract and
Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering
integrate various different expertise, leading to scientific and
economical returns of significant impact.
Sandra Costanzo
Alvaro Rocha
Marcelo Sampaio de Alencar
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