scholarly journals Geometric Sequence Decomposition-based Interference Cancellation in Automotive Radar Systems

IEEE Access ◽  
2022 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Woong-Hee Lee ◽  
Seongwook Lee
Author(s):  
István Balajti

Nowadays, the interference cancellation or mitigation plays a key important role in the effective use of the advanced radar technology. This article is focused on the symposium presentations related to Electromagnetic Spectrum Operations (EMSO) of the radar systems. The modernisation of the Hungarian Army, the success of the Zrínyi 2026 program, basically depends on the understanding and the professional service of new technologies during their lifecycle. In civilian applications, the inter-radar interference of automotive radars is an emerging problem for automotive radar applications in case of dense deployment. Consequently, it is a priority task to gather, evaluate and transfer collected expertise on the advanced research findings and concepts related to emerging sensor technologies. It looks like the permanent engineering/scientific policies should be implemented to monitor and maximise radar performance to support safety measures required within EMSO. The article summarises the most recent results of the radars taking into account the domesticexpectations.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sujeet Patole ◽  
Murat Torlak ◽  
Dan Wang ◽  
Murtaza Ali

Automotive radars, along with other sensors such as lidar, (which stands for “light detection and ranging”), ultrasound, and cameras, form the backbone of self-driving cars and advanced driver assistant systems (ADASs). These technological advancements are enabled by extremely complex systems with a long signal processing path from radars/sensors to the controller. Automotive radar systems are responsible for the detection of objects and obstacles, their position, and speed relative to the vehicle. The development of signal processing techniques along with progress in the millimeter- wave (mm-wave) semiconductor technology plays a key role in automotive radar systems. Various signal processing techniques have been developed to provide better resolution and estimation performance in all measurement dimensions: range, azimuth-elevation angles, and velocity of the targets surrounding the vehicles. This article summarizes various aspects of automotive radar signal processing techniques, including waveform design, possible radar architectures, estimation algorithms, implementation complexity-resolution trade-off, and adaptive processing for complex environments, as well as unique problems associated with automotive radars such as pedestrian detection. We believe that this review article will combine the several contributions scattered in the literature to serve as a primary starting point to new researchers and to give a bird’s-eye view to the existing research community.


Author(s):  
Robert Prophet ◽  
Marcel Hoffmann ◽  
Alicja Ossowska ◽  
Waqas Malik ◽  
Christian Sturm ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moxuan Han ◽  
Qingbo Liu ◽  
Lizhong Jiang ◽  
Yong Huang ◽  
Taixia Shi ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ushemadzoro Chipengo ◽  
Peter M. Krenz ◽  
Shawn Carpenter

Advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) have recently been thrust into the spotlight in the automotive industry as carmakers and technology companies pursue effective active safety systems and fully autonomous vehicles. Various sensors such as lidar (light detection and ranging), radar (radio detection and ranging), ultrasonic, and optical cameras are employed to provide situational awareness to vehicles in a highly dynamic environment. Radar has emerged as a primary sensor technology for both active/passive safety and comfort-advanced driver-assistance systems. Physically building and testing radar systems to demonstrate reliability is an expensive and time-consuming process. Simulation emerges as the most practical solution to designing and testing radar systems. This paper provides a complete, full physics simulation workflow for automotive radar using finite element method and asymptotic ray tracing electromagnetic solvers. The design and optimization of both transmitter and receiver antennas is presented. Antenna interaction with vehicle bumper and fascia is also investigated. A full physics-based radar scene corner case is modelled to obtain high-fidelity range-Doppler maps. Finally, this paper investigates the effects of inclined roads on late pedestrian detection and the effects of construction metal plate radar returns on false target identification. Possible solutions are suggested and validated. Results from this study show how pedestrian radar returns can be increased by over 16 dB for early detection along with a 27 dB reduction in road construction plate radar returns to suppress false target identification. Both solutions to the above corner cases can potentially save pedestrian lives and prevent future accidents.


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