The present invention relates to a radar device that determines the position of a target by a delay time from radiation of radiowaves to reception of the radiowaves reflected by the target and the direction of the reflected radiowaves.
As disclosed in, for example, Non-Patent Literature 1, a traditional radar device causes a transmitter to generate signals in different frequency bands and cause a transmission antenna to transmit the signals to determine the position of a target by a delay time from radiation of radiowaves to reception of the radiowaves reflected by the target and by the direction of the reflected radiowaves.
Unfortunately, in the traditional technique above, while the target is moving, the received signal spectra are shifted by the Doppler frequency to neighboring frequency bands. This phenomenon generates false peaks at positions away from distances equal to the widths of the transmitted pulses, and these peaks are erroneously detected as a target.
An object of the present invention, which has been made in view of the above mentioned problem, is to provide a radar device that can prevent erroneous detection of a target due to the false peaks.
The radar device according to the present invention includes: a transmission module to concurrently transmit radiowaves of different frequency bands from antennas; a reception module to receive target-reflected waves transmitted from the transmission module and reflected by a target; a synthetic processing module to combine the target-reflected waves corresponding to the respective antennas, received by the reception module, in a manner that suppresses false peaks caused by shift to other frequency bands due to the Doppler frequency; and a detection processing module to detect the target using a result of the combining obtained by the synthetic processing module.
The radar device according to the present invention suppresses false peaks resulting from the target-reflected waves and generated by shift of the target-reflected waves to other frequency bands by the Doppler frequency, and combining the target-reflected waves. Thus, erroneous detection of the target due to the false peaks can be prevented.
The embodiments of the present invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The radar device according to the present embodiment includes transmitters 1-#1 to 1-#M, transmission antennas 2-#1 to 2-#M, transmission-side A/D converters 3-#1 to 3-#M, reception antennas 4-#1 to 4-#L, receivers 5-#1 to 5-#L, reception-side A/D converters 6-#1 to 6-#L, pulse compressors 7-#1 to 7-#L, transmission digital beam forming (DBF) units 8-#1 to 8-#L, a reception DBF unit 9, and a target detector 10.
The transmitters 1-#1 to 1-#M generate linear-frequency-modulated (FM) signals, where M (M≥2) represents the number of the transmitters. The transmission antennas 2-#1 to 2-#M correspond to the transmitters 1-#1 to 1-#M, respectively, and transmit the signals generated in the transmitters 1-#1 to 1-#M. The transmission-side A/D converters 3-#1 to 3-#M convert transmitted analog signals into digital signals. The reception antennas 4-#1 to 4-#L receive radiowaves that are sent from the transmission antennas 2-#1 to 2-#M and are reflected by a target, where L (L≥2) represents the number of the reception antennas. The receivers 5-#1 to 5-#L, respectively, limit the frequency bands of radiowaves received by the respective reception antennas 4-#1 to 4-#L and detect the phases of the radiowaves. The reception-side A/D converters 6-#1 to 6-#L, respectively, convert the analog signals from the receivers 5-#1 to 5-#L into digital signals.
The pulse compressors 7-#1 to 7-#L compress pulses in response to A/D-Converted Signals #1 to #L from the reception-side A/D converters 6-#1 to 6-#L and reference signals #1 to #M from the transmission-side A/D converters 3-#1 to 3-#M, which will be described below. The transmission DBF units 8-#1 to 8-#L are processors that form beams based on the compressed signals from the respective pulse compressors 7-#1 to 7-#L. The reception DBF unit 9 is a processor that combines the signals from the transmission DBF units 8-#1 to 8-#L in response to the transmitted beams. The target detector 10 is a processor that detects the direction of a target and the distance therefrom based on signals from the reception DBF unit 9. The pulse compressors 7-#1 to 7-#L to the target detector 10 make up a signal processor 11.
The transmitters 1-#1 to 1-#M, the transmission antennas 2-#1 to 2-#M, and the transmission-side A/D converters 3-#1 to 3-#M make up a transmission module that sends radiowaves of different frequency bands from the antennas. The reception antennas 4-#1 to 4-#L and the receivers 5-#1 to 5-#L make up a reception module that receives radiowaves sent from the transmission module and reflected by a target or target-reflected waves. Furthermore, the reception-side A/D converters 6-#1 to 6-#L, the pulse compressors 7-#l, and the transmission DBF units 8-#1 to 8-#L make up a synthetic processing module that suppresses false peaks resulting from signals of the target-reflected waves corresponding to the antennas in the reception module receiving the target-reflected waves and combines the signals. The false peaks are generated by shift of the target-reflected waves to other frequency bands by the Doppler frequency. The reception DBF unit 9 and the target detector 10 make up a detection processing module that detects a target based on results of combined signal from the synthetic processing module.
The received signal FET units 71-#1 to 71-#M perform Fast Fourier Transforms (FFTs) on the A/D-Converted Signals #1 from the reception-side A/D converters 6-#l. The reference signal FET units 72-#1 to 72-#M are operation units that enter signals from the transmission-side A/D converters 3-#1 to 3-#M as reference signals #1 to #M and execute the FFTs on the reference signals #1 to #M.
The multiplication circuits 73-#1 to 73-#M, respectively, multiply signals from the received signal FET units 71-#1 to 71-#M by complex conjugates of signals from the reference signal FET units 72-#1 to 72-#M. The complex-window-function multiplication circuits 74-#1 to 74-#M, respectively, multiply signals from the multiplication circuits 73-#1 to 73-#M by window functions defining notches neighboring false peaks occurring from the Doppler frequency. The IFFT units 75-#1 to 75-#M are operation units that perform Inverse Fast Fourier Transforms (IFFTs) on signals from the complex-window-function multiplication circuits 74-#1 to 74-#M.
In the signal processor 11 having such a configuration, the processor 111 executes programs stored in the memory 112. The functions of the pulse compressors 7-#l to 7-#L to the target detector 10 are thereby achieved.
The operation of the radar device according to Embodiment 1 will now be described.
The transmitters 1-#m and the transmission antennas 2-#m transmit pulsed waves, where 1≤m≤M (step ST1). The transmitted waves also propagate to the transmission-side A/D converters 3-#m, which output reference signals -#m (step ST2).
The transmitted waves are reflected by a target and received by the respective reception antennas 4-#1 to 4-#L (step ST3). The radiowaves received by the reception antennas 4-#l are phase-detected and limited in frequency bands by receivers 5-#l and are then sent to the reception-side A/D converters 6-#l, where 1≤l≤L. The reception-side A/D converters 6-#l convert the analog signals from the receivers 5-#l into digital signals.
The signals from the reception-side A/D converters 6-#l or the A/D-Converted Signals #l are transmitted to the respective received signal FET units 71-#1 to 71-#M in the pulse compressor 7-#l. The received signal FET units 71-#1 to 71-#M perform FFTs on the received signals to generate the received signal spectra (step ST4), respectively. The received signal spectra are denoted by xl, m, 1, . . . , xl, m, N. Reference signals #m (1≤m≤M) are transmitted to the reference signal FET units 72-#1 to 72-#M, respectively. The reference signal FET units 72-#1 to 72-#M perform FFTs on the reference signals #m to generate the reference signal spectra. The reference signal spectra are denoted by ym, 1, . . . , ym, N.
The received signal spectra xl, m, 1, . . . , xl, m, N and reference signal spectra ym, 1, . . . , ym, N are transmitted to the respective multiplication circuits 73-#1 to 73-#M. The multiplication circuits 73-#1 to 73-#M multiply the received signal spectra by the complex conjugates of the reference signal spectra to generate compressed signal spectra z1, m, 1, . . . , zl, m, N (step ST5).
z′
l,m,n
=x
l,m,n
y
l,m,n*, (1)
where “*” represents a complex conjugate.
The complex-window-function multiplication circuits 74-#1 to 74-#M multiply complex window functions wm, 1 . . . Wm, N by the compressed signal spectra to output complex window function multiplication signals wm, 1zl, m, 1, . . . wm, Nzl, m, N (step ST6).
The complex window functions wm, 1 . . . wm, N are calculated as elements of a vector wm calculated by Expression (2). In Expression (2), 1 represents a 1×N vector of which elements are all 1, I represents a N×N unit vector, and ζ(t) represents a weight having a large factor of time region equal to a pulse width.
The complex window function multiplication signals wm, 1zl, m, 1, . . . , wm, Nzl, m, N from the complex-window-function multiplication circuits 74-#1 to 74-#M are transmitted to the respective IFFT units 75-#1 to 75-#M. The IFFT units 75-#1 to 75-#M perform IFFTs on the complex window function multiplication signals wm, 1zl, m 1, . . . , wm, Nzl, m, N to generate pulse-compressed signals ηl, m, 1, . . . , wm, Nzl, m, N (step ST7). The number n in ηl, m, n represents the number of the range bin of which the unit is a distance resolution determined from, for example, a transmission-frequency bandwidth B. The pulse-compressed signals ηl, m, 1, . . . , ηl, m, N (denoted by pulse-compressed signals #1 to #M in
The DBF signal gl, n (θ) from the transmission DBF unit 8-#l is transmitted to the reception DBF unit 9. The reception DBF unit 9 calculates phase correction values ψ1(θ) to ψL (θ) corresponding to the directions θ of radiowaves and the positions of the reception antennas and then calculates a combined signal hn (θ) in accordance with Expression (4) (step ST9).
The DBF signal hn (θ) received from the reception DBF unit 9 is transmitted to the target detector 10. The target detector 10 compares the absolute value |hn (θ)| of the received DBF signal with a threshold determined based on a false-alarm probability where a noise is erroneously determined to be a target signal. Signals exceeding the threshold are determined to be target signals in n range bins at the angle θ (step ST10).
In this manner, the radar device according to Embodiment 1 employs window functions to define notches at the positions away from the main lobe at intervals equal to pulse widths. False peaks due to the Doppler frequency can be thereby reduced and erroneous detection of a target can be prevented.
As described above, the radar device according to Embodiment 1 includes: a transmission module simultaneously transmitting radiowaves of different frequency bands from antennas; a reception module receiving target-reflected waves transmitted from the transmission module and reflected by a target; a synthetic processing module suppressing false peaks resulting from the target-reflected waves corresponding to the respective antennas in the reception module receiving the target-reflected waves, and combining the target waves; and a detection processing module detecting the target using a result of the combining obtained by the synthetic processing module. The false peaks are caused by shift to other frequency bands due to the Doppler frequency. Thus, erroneous detection of the target due to the false peaks can be prevented.
In accordance with the radar device of Embodiment 1, the transmission module includes: M transmitters generating analog signals having linear-frequency-modulated waveforms at different frequency bands where M is equal to or larger than 2; M transmission antennas transmitting the analog signals generated by the M transmitters as radiowaves; and M transmission-side A/D converters converting the analog signals generated by the M transmitters into digital signals. Thus, the transmission module can prevent erroneous detection of the target due to false peaks.
In accordance with the radar device of Embodiment 1, the reception module includes: L reception antennas receiving radiowaves reflected by the target where L≥2; and L receivers confining frequency bands of the radiowaves received by the L reception antennas and detecting phases of the radiowaves. Thus, the reception module can prevent erroneous detection of the target due to false peaks.
In accordance with the radar device of Embodiment 1, the synthetic processing module includes: L reception-side A/D converters converting analog signals from the reception module into digital signals; L pulse compressors suppressing the false peaks based on the digital signals from the L reception-side A/D converters and the M transmission-side A/D converters to compress pulses; and L transmission DBF units combining the respective compressed pulse signals from the L pulse compressors based on the analog signals generated by the M transmitters and having different frequency bands. Thus, the synthetic processing module can prevent erroneous detection of the target due to false peaks.
In accordance with the radar device of Embodiment 1, the detection processing module includes: a reception DBF unit combining the signals outputted from the L transmission DBF units; and a target detector detecting the target by a threshold determined based on a false-alarm probability erroneously detecting noises in the signals from the reception DBF unit as target signals. Thus, the detection processing module can prevent erroneous detection of the target due to false peaks.
In accordance with the radar device of Embodiment 1, L pulse compressors each include: M received-signal FFT units performing Fourier transforms on the digital signals from the reception-side A/D converters to generate received signal spectra; M reference-signal FFT units performing Fourier transforms on the digital signals from the transmission-side A/D converters to generate reference signal spectra; M multiplication circuits generating compressed signal spectra from the received signal spectra from the M received-signal FFT units and the reference signal spectra from the M reference-signal FFT units; M complex-window-function multiplication circuits multiplying window functions defining notches neighboring the false peaks by the compressed signal spectra from the M multiplication circuits; and M IFFT units performing inverse Fourier transforms on the signals outputted from the M complex-window-function multiplication circuits. Thus, the pulse compressor can prevent erroneous detection of the target due to false peaks.
The radar device according to Embodiment 2 includes transmitters 1-#1 to 1-#M, transmission antennas 2-#1 to 2-#M, transmission-side A/D converters 3-#1 to 3-#M, reception antennas 4-#1 to 4-#L, receivers 5-#1 to 5-#L, reception-side A/D converters 6-#1 to 6-#L, speed-responsive pulse compressors 7a-#1 to 7a-#L, transmission DBF units 8-#1 to 8-#L, a reception DBF unit 9, and a target detector 10. Components other than the speed-responsive pulse compressors 7a-#1 to 7a-#L in a signal processor 11a are the same as those of Embodiment 1 in
The speed-responsive pulse compressors 7a-#1 to 7a-#L suppress false peaks according to speed ranges.
In
The speed-range-responsive complex-window-function multiplication circuits 76-#1 to 76-#M calculate window functions defining notches neighboring false peaks from an expected target speed and multiply the window functions by signals from the multiplication circuits 73-#1 to 73-#M.
The signal processor 11a includes a speed-responsive signal processing board. The hardware configuration achieving the speed-responsive pulse compressors 7a-#1 to 7a-#L to the target detector 10 is the same as that including the processor 111, the memory 112, and the display 113 illustrated in
The operation of the radar device according to Embodiment 2 will now be explained.
The transmitters 1-#m and the transmission antennas 2-#m transmit pulsed waves, where 1≤m≤M. The subsequent operations from the reception antenna 4-#l at the reception side to the multiplication circuits 73-#1 to 73-#M in the speed-responsive pulse compressor 7a-#l are the same as those in Embodiment 1. When the spectra zl, m, 1, . . . , zl, m, N of compressed signals from the multiplication circuits 73-#1 to 73-#M are transmitted to the speed-range-responsive complex-window-function multiplication circuits 76-#1 to 76-#M, the speed-range-responsive complex-window-function multiplication circuits 76-#1 to 76-#M multiply the complex window functions wm, 1 . . . wm, N by the compressed signal spectra. The complex window functions wm, 1 . . . wm, N are calculated as elements of a vector wm calculated according to Expression (5) below:
where signals y′m, 1, . . . , y′m, N represent spectrum components of signals of the target-reflected waves affected by the Doppler frequency and received by the transmission antennas -#m, and k is a parameter corresponding to the target speeds.
The received signal spectra affected by the Doppler frequency y′m, 1, . . . , y′m, N are obtained, for example, by the Doppler shifting of reference signals um, 1, . . . , um, N from the transmitters 1-#m according to Expression (6) below, generating Pseudo signals u′m, k, 1, . . . , u′m, k, N, which then undergo FFTs:
where λ represents a transmission wavelength, vk represents the kth target speed of multiple target speeds, and Δt represents a sampling interval of A/D conversion (by the transmission-side A/D converters 3-#1 to 3-#M and the reception-side A/D converters 6-#1 to 6-#L).
In Embodiment 2, the window functions used in ST6 in the flow chart of Embodiment 1 are replaced with those calculated according to Expression (5). In this manner, the window functions defining notches at the positions away from the main lobe at intervals equal to pulse widths are calculated from the expected target speeds. Thus, the speed range of the target from which the effects of suppressed false peaks are expected can be enlarged.
As described above, in accordance with the radar device of Embodiment 2, L pulse compressors each includes: M received-signal FFT units performing Fourier transforms on the digital signals from the reception-side A/D converters to generate received signal spectra; M reference-signal FFT units performing Fourier transforms on the digital signals from the transmission-side A/D converters to generate reference signal spectra; M multiplication circuits generating compressed signal spectra from the received signal spectra from the M received-signal FFT units and the reference signal spectra from the M reference-signal FFT units; M speed-range-responsive complex-window-function multiplication circuits calculating window functions defining notches neighboring the false peaks from an expected target speed and multiplying the window functions by the signals from the M multiplication circuits; and M IFFT units performing inverse Fourier transforms on the signals from the M speed-range-responsive complex-window-function multiplication circuits. Thus, the speed range of the target from which the effects of suppressed false peaks are expected can be enlarged.
The radar device according to Embodiment 3 includes transmitters 1-#1 to 1-#M, transmission antennas 2-#1 to 2-#M, transmission-side A/D converters 3-#1 to 3-#M, reception antennas 4-#1 to 4-#L, receivers 5-#1 to 5-#L, reception-side A/D converters 6-#1 to 6-#L, sidelobe-responsive pulse compressors 7b-#1 to 7b-#L, transmission DBF units 8-#1 to 8-#L, a reception DBF unit 9, and a target detector 10. Components other than the sidelobe-responsive pulse compressors 7b-#1 to 7b-#L are the same as those of Embodiment 1 in
The sidelobe-responsive pulse compressors 7b-#1 to 7b-#L suppress false peaks responsive to sidelobes.
In
The sidelobe-responsive complex-window-function multiplication circuits 77-#1 to 77-#M calculate window functions defining notches neighboring false peaks together with sidelobe levels to multiply the window functions by signals from the multiplication circuits 73-#1 to 73-#M.
The signal processor 11b includes a sidelobe-responsive signal processing board. The hardware configuration achieving the sidelobe-responsive pulse compressors 7b-#1 to 7b-#L to the target detector 10 is the same as that in
The operation of the radar device according to Embodiment 3 will now be explained.
The transmitters 1-#m and the transmission antennas 2-#m transmit pulsed waves, where 1≤m≤M. The subsequent operations from the reception antennas 4-#l at the reception side to the multiplication circuits 73-#1 to 73-#M in the sidelobe-responsive pulse compressor 7b-#l are the same as those in Embodiment 1. In response to transmission of the spectra al, m, 1, . . . , zl, m, N of compressed signals from the multiplication circuits 73-#1 to 73-#M to the sidelobe-responsive complex-window-function multiplication circuits 77-#1 to 77-#M, the sidelobe-responsive complex-window-function multiplication circuits 77-#1 to 77-#M multiply the complex window functions wm, 1 . . . wm, N by the compressed signal spectra. The complex window functions wm, 1 . . . wm, N are calculated as elements of a vector wm calculated according to Expression (7):
where 1 represents a 1×N vector of which elements are all 1, I represents a N×N unit vector, and ζ′(t) represents a weight having an enlarged factor of time region that is equal to a pulse width and also adjusts the sidelobe levels.
In Embodiment 3, the window functions used in ST6 in the flow chart according to Embodiment 1 are replaced with those calculated in accordance with Expression (7), as described above. The window functions defining notches at the positions away from the main lobe at intervals equal to pulse widths are calculated together with the sidelobe levels. Thus, the effects of a reduction in sidelobe level and suppressed false peaks can be expected.
As described above, in accordance with the radar device of Embodiment 3, L pulse compressors each include: M received-signal FFT units performing Fourier transforms on the digital signals from the reception-side A/D converters to generate received signal spectra; M reference-signal FFT units performing Fourier transforms on the digital signals from the transmission-side A/D converters to generate reference signal spectra; M multiplication circuits generating compressed signal spectra from the received signal spectra from the M received-signal FFT units and the reference signal spectra from the M reference-signal FFT units; M sidelobe-responsive complex-window-function multiplication circuits calculating window functions defining notches neighboring the false peaks to multiply the window functions by the signals from the M multiplication circuits; and M IFFT units performing inverse Fourier transforms on the signals from the M sidelobe-responsive complex-window-function multiplication circuit. Thus, the effects of suppressed false peaks and a reduction in sidelobe level can be achieved.
It should be noted that the present invention can include any combination of embodiments, or modifications or omission of any component in the embodiments within the scope of the invention.
As described above, the radar device according to the present invention is targeted at a configuration that prevents erroneous detection, caused by false peaks due to the Doppler frequency, of a target, and is suitable for use in, for example, multi-input multi-output (MIMO) radars.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2016/062327 | 4/19/2016 | WO | 00 |