The subject matter disclosed herein related to detection and localization of tags.
In some example embodiments, there is provided a tag. The tag may include an antenna configured to receive a first radio frequency signal and to reradiate a second radio frequency signal; and an ultrasonic transducer coupled to the antenna, wherein an ultrasound signal received by the ultrasonic transducer causes a variation of at least one property of the ultrasonic transducer, wherein the variation of the at least one property imparts a modulation onto at least a portion of the first radio frequency signal, and wherein the modulated first radio frequency signal is reradiated by the antenna as the second radio frequency signal.
In some variations one or more of the features disclosed herein including one or more of the following can optionally be included. The at least one property may be an electrical property of the ultrasonic transducer. The electrical property may include at least an impedance of the ultrasonic transducer. The tag may further include at least one matching circuit to provide impedance matching between the antenna and the ultrasonic transducer. The radio frequency signal may include a continuous wave radio frequency signal. The ultrasound may include a pulsed signal. The ultrasonic transducer may include a piezoelectric transducer or a capacitive transducer. The ultrasonic transducer may include a capacitive micromachined ultrasonic transducer. The tag may be passive, such that the tag does not include a battery and/or a powered, active component. The tag may include a plurality of antennas. The tag may include a plurality of ultrasonic transducers.
In some example embodiments, there is provided a system including an ultrasonic transducer configured to transmit an ultrasound signal towards a tag being located by the system; an antenna configured to transmit a first radio frequency signal towards the tag and receive a second radio frequency signal from the tag, the second radio frequency signal including a modulation caused by the ultrasound signal received by the tag; and detection circuitry to detect the modulation and provide an indication of a presence of the modulation on the received second radio frequency signal and/or an indication of a distance to the tag.
In some variations one or more of the features disclosed herein including one or more of the following can optionally be included. The indication of a distance may correspond to the measured time for the ultrasound signal to travel from the system to the tag. The detection circuitry may include digital down conversion circuitry. The system may further include a circulator coupled to the antenna; self-interference cancellation circuitry coupled to the circulator; and an analog-to-digital converter coupled to the self-interference circuity and the detection circuitry. The system may include a plurality of antennas. The system may include a plurality of ultrasonic transducers. The ultrasonic transducer may include a plurality of ultrasonic transducers. The system may include a plurality of tags. At least one of the tags may be passive, such that the tag does not include a battery and/or a powered, active device.
In some example embodiments, there is provided a tag. The tag may include an antenna configured to receive a first radio frequency signal and to reradiate a second radio frequency signal; and a photodiode coupled to the antenna, wherein an optical signal received by the photodiode imparts a modulation onto at least a portion of the first radio frequency signal, and wherein the modulated first radio frequency signal is reradiated by the antenna as the second radio frequency signal.
In some variations one or more of the features disclosed herein including one or more of the following can optionally be included. The at least one property may be an electrical property of the photodiode. The electrical property may include at least an impedance of the photodiode. The tag may include at least one matching circuit to provide impedance matching between the antenna and the photodiode. The radio frequency signal may include a continuous wave radio frequency signal. The optical signal may include a modulated signal. The photodiode may include a silicon p-n junction diode. The tag may be passive, such that the tag does not include a battery and/or a powered, active component.
In some example embodiments, there is provided a system including an optical emitter configured to transmit an optical signal towards a tag being located by the system; an antenna array configured to transmit a first radio frequency signal towards the tag and receive a second radio frequency signal from the passive tag, wherein the second radio frequency signal includes a modulation caused by the optical signal received by the tag; and detection circuitry configured to detect the modulation and provide an indication of a presence of the modulation and/or an indication of a distance to the tag.
In some variations one or more of the features disclosed herein including one or more of the following can optionally be included. The indication of a distance may correspond to the measured time for the optical signal to travel from the system to the tag and for the reradiated radio frequency signal to travel back from the tag to the system. The detection circuitry may include digital down conversion circuitry. The system may include a circulator coupled to the at least one antenna; self-interference cancellation circuitry coupled to the circulator; and an analog-to-digital converter coupled to the self-interference circuity and the detection circuitry. At least one optical emitter may include an array of optical emitters. The system may include a plurality of tags. At least one of the tags may be passive, such that the tag does not include a battery and/or a powered, active device.
In some example embodiments, there is provided a method including receiving, by an antenna at a tag, a first radio frequency signal; and transmitting, by the antenna at the tag, a second radio frequency signal, wherein the second radio frequency signal is varied by an ultrasound signal received by an ultrasonic transducer coupled to the antenna and/or varied by an optical signal received by a photodiode at the tag.
In some example embodiments, there is provided a method including transmitting a first signal towards a tag being located by the system, the first signal comprising an ultrasound signal generated by an ultrasonic transducer and/or an optical signal generated by an optical emitter; transmitting, by at least one antenna, a first radio frequency signal towards the tag; receiving a second radio frequency signal from the tag, the second radio frequency signal including a modulation caused by the ultrasound signal that is received by the tag and/or the optical signal that is received by the tag; and detecting the modulation and providing an indication of a presence of the modulation on the received second radio frequency signal and/or an indication of a distance to the tag.
Implementations of the current subject matter can include systems and methods consistent including one or more features described herein as well as articles that comprise a tangibly embodied machine-readable medium operable to cause one or more machines (e.g., computers, etc.) to result in operations described herein. Similarly, computer systems are also described that may include one or more processors and one or more memories coupled to the one or more processors. A memory, which can include a computer-readable storage medium, may include, encode, store, or the like one or more programs that cause one or more processors to perform one or more of the operations described herein. Computer implemented methods consistent with one or more implementations of the current subject matter can be implemented by one or more data processors residing in a single computing system or multiple computing systems. Such multiple computing systems can be connected and can exchange data and/or commands or other instructions or the like via one or more connections, including but not limited to a connection over a network (e.g. the Internet, a wireless wide area network, a local area network, a wide area network, a wired network, or the like), via a direct connection between one or more of the multiple computing systems, etc.
The details of one or more variations of the subject matter described herein are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features and advantages of the subject matter described herein will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims. It should be readily understood that such features are not intended to be limiting. The claims that follow this disclosure are intended to define the scope of the protected subject matter.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, show certain aspects of the subject matter disclosed herein and, together with the description, help explain some of the principles associated with the disclosed implementations. In the drawings,
When practical, like labels are used to refer to same or similar items in the drawings.
Although
The reader 110 may include transceiver circuitry 252 configured to generate RF and ultrasound signals for transmission and to detect from the return RF signal the sidebands (which were introduced at the tag by the modulation caused by the ultrasound), an RF antenna 254 configured to transmit RF signals towards one or more tags and receive RF return signals from the one or more tags 112A-C, and an ultrasonic transducer 256 configured to transmit ultrasound towards the one or more tags, in accordance with some example embodiments.
In some example embodiments, the reader 110 may transmit the RF signals as a continuous wave (CW) RF transmission. In some example embodiments, the reader transmits the ultrasound in pulses. Alternatively, or additionally, the RF signals or ultrasound signals may be chirped, in which case the transmitted signals may increase (or decrease) in frequency over time. The use of chirping may enable the reader to detect the velocity of the tag based on the Doppler effect (e.g., the carrier frequency and the modulation frequency of the return RF signal will be shifted by an amount proportional to the velocity of the tag). The pulse shape of the ultrasound signal may be a raised cosine waveform, a sinc waveform, and/or a Gaussian waveform, although other types of pulse shapes may be used as well. The ultrasound may be configured to have a pulse bandwidth of 10 Hz to 100 kHz, although other bandwidths may be used as well. And, the ultrasound may be configured to have a pulse repetition frequency (PRF) of 0.1 Hz to 10 kHz, although other PRFs may be used as well.
In some example embodiments, the one or more tags 112A-C may each include an RF antenna 264 configured to receive the RF signals transmitted by the reader 110 and to reradiate the RF return signals toward the reader. The tag may also include an ultrasonic transducer 266 configured to receive the ultrasound signal transmitted by the reader. Moreover, the tag may include passive circuitry 262 (labeled “Passive Network”) configured to passively convert the variation of the ultrasound transducer due to incident ultrasound into a modulation of the reradiated RF signal. As such, the tag's reradiated RF return signal is modulated by the ultrasound signal at the frequency of the ultrasound (e.g., fUS), which may be pulsed as described above.
In some example embodiments, the tags 112A-C are passive. Passive in this context refers to the tags not having an independent power source, such as a battery. In other words, each tag receives, modulates, and reradiates the return RF signal without active, powered components, such as amplifiers. Moreover, these passive tags do not include active devices, GPS location circuity, or processors that allow the tag itself to determine its location (or distance to or from the reader) and then provide the location or distance to the reader. In other words, a passive tag reradiates the received RF signal to enable the reader to determine the location of the tag.
At time t1, the reader 110 transmits a CW RF signal 202A at frequency fRF and power PRF,Tx and transmits a pulse of ultrasound 210A with ultrasonic carrier frequency fUS. As RF signals travel at the speed of light while sound, including ultrasound, travels much slower than light, the tag 112B may receive the CW RF signal 202B before any of the ultrasound is detected by the tag 112B. At time t1, the reradiated RF signal 212B may represent the received RF signal 202B with corresponding amplitude losses and/or a phase shift. This reradiated RF signal 212B is subsequently received (as shown at 212A) by the reader (with additional losses and phase shift). At time t2, the tag 112B is still waiting for the ultrasound pulse 210B to be received by a tag.
At time t3, however, the pulse of ultrasound 210C arrives at the tag 112B after a time delay. This delay is based on the distance, z, between the reader 110 and the tag 112B, and the speed of sound cus. In other words, the distance, z, is equal to the time delay multiplied by the speed of the ultrasound. The incident ultrasound 210C is received by the ultrasonic transducer 266 at the tag 112B. The received ultrasound wave 210C varies the properties (e.g., electrical properties such as impedance, capacitance, and/or the like) of the transducer 266. This variation modulates the impedance load seen by the tag's RF antenna 264 and passive circuitry network 262, such that the modulation creates sidebands in a reradiated RF signal 212C. The reradiated return signal 212C is centered at fRF with a first sideband at fRF plus the frequency of the ultrasound signal (fUS) and a second sideband at fRF minus the frequency of the ultrasound signal (fUS). The power in each sideband is equal to the available RF power at the tag multiplied by the backscatter efficiency, nbs. The reradiated signal represents a modified version of the RF signal received by the tag.
The reader 110 receives the reradiated RF signal 212D (with losses due to propagation, for example) from the tag 112B. The reader demodulates the received, reradiated RF return signal 212D to recover the ultrasound. As most of the delay can be attributed to the delay caused by the ultrasound traveling from the reader to the tag (as the return from the tag to the reader is at the speed of light), the reader (which knows the time the ultrasound pulse 210A was transmitted and the time of the return RF signal carrying that pulse) determines the time delay for the ultrasound signal to travel to the tag. This time delay corresponds directly to the distance between the reader 110 and the tag 112B (e.g., distance equals rate multiplied by time). In converting from the time delay to the distance estimate, the reader may also take into other delays, such as the group delay of the reader transducer 256, the group delay of the tag transducer 266, or other time delays.
The link budget between the reader 110 and tag 112B may be determined as follows:
where power PRF,Rx is the signal power captured by the reader in a single sideband, Gant,reader is the reader antenna gain, Gant,tag is the tag antenna gain, γRF is the RF wavelength of operation, Greader is the net gain of the RF part of the transceiver (TRx) 252, and L is the net excess distance-independent loss. The backscatter efficiency, nbs, is a quadratic function of the acoustic pressure pinc incident on the tag, and pint is inversely proportional to z in the far-field of the reader's ultrasonic transmitter. For a tag located in the far field of the reader's ultrasonic transmitter (US Tx), PRF,Rx is inversely proportional to z6, which corresponds to a slope of −18 dB/octave.
The corresponding accuracy γz for the localization of a tag, such as tag 112B, may be determined according to the following:
where β is the effective bandwidth of the baseband pulse, E is the signal energy in a single received pulse, and N0 is the noise power spectral density of the reader. Based on (2), δz may be considered inversely proportional to z3, which corresponds to a slope of −9 dB/octave. Example values of all parameters in (1) and (2) are listed in Table I.
As noted, the ultrasonic transducer 302 receives the incident ultrasound. In some example embodiments, the transducer 302 may be a precharged CMUT, although other types of ultrasound transducers such as regular (non-precharged) CMUTs, piezoelectric devices, piezoelectric micromachined ultrasonic transducers (PMUTs), electrets, electret films, membrane-based transducers, transducer arrays, and/or the like may be used as well. A precharged CMUT contains trapped charge on an isolated electrode that effectively biases the CMUT to provide self-sufficient high-sensitivity signal transduction.
In some example embodiments, the selection of the ultrasonic frequency (fUS) at which the tag operates is based on the motivation to maximize the transducer's fractional change in capacitance for a given incident ultrasonic pressure; this fractional capacitance change is proportional to the transducer's displacement sensitivity SRx, so the frequency that maximizes SRx may advantageously be chosen as fUS. In some example embodiments, fUS=55.3 kHz may be selected as the ultrasonic center frequency, although other ultrasonic frequencies may be used as well. In some example embodiments, the selection of the RF frequency, fRF, may be selected so that the RF frequency is sufficiently high to enable the use of correspondingly smaller, miniaturized antennas at the tag, while also considering the properties of the packaged tag transducer. In the case of the precharged CMUT described above for example, the impedance of the packaged CMUT above about 100 MHz may primarily be caused by the parasitics of the package itself rather than the CMUT's capacitance. Therefore, well above that frequency, any variation in this capacitance created by incident ultrasonic pressure would not significantly vary the impedance load seen by the tag's RF antenna. In those example embodiments, fRF=145 MHz may be selected as the RF center frequency, although other RF frequencies may be used as well.
Although some of the examples refer to system operation at an RF frequency of 145 MHz and an ultrasonic frequency of 55.3 kHz, the system may be operated at other frequencies as well. In some implementations, the RF center frequency may be between 100 kHz and 100 GHz, although other ranges may be realized as well, while the ultrasound carrier frequency may be between 0.1 Hz and 10 MHz, or between 20 kHz and 1 MHz, although other ranges may be realized as well.
Referring again to
In the example of
As noted, the circuitry of the tag 300 may be considered passive circuitry as it does not include any active components (e.g., an amplifier) or require an independent power source, such as a battery, to couple the transducer 302 and RF antenna 310 and then reradiate the return signal. The passive network 320 shown in
The ultrasonic transducer 302 may be considered a device having electrical properties (e.g., capacitance) that vary as displacement caused by the ultrasound changes the physical structure of the transducer. For example, the received ultrasound may change the impedance of the ultrasonic transducer. This variation may cause the impedance load seen by the antenna 310 to change. The change in the impedance load modulates the reradiated RF return signal. In the frequency domain, this modulation caused in part by the ultrasonic transducer appears as a first sideband at the RF center frequency (fRF) plus the ultrasound frequency (fUS) and a second sideband at the RF center frequency (fRF) minus the ultrasound frequency (fUS). In other words, the received ultrasound causes a variation of at least one property of the ultrasonic transducer (which is coupled to the antenna). This variation of at least one property causes the RF signal which is received at the tag to be modulated such that the reradiated, return RF signal carries this modulation towards the reader. As noted, the reradiated, return RF signal represents a modified version (e.g., to include the modulation caused by the ultrasound) of the received RF signal.
Regarding the backscatter efficiency, nbs, of the tag 300, the backscatter efficiency may be maximized (in order to maximize the amount of the received RF signal that is reradiated in the sidebands of the transmitted RF return signal) when the ultrasonic transducer 302 is impedance-matched to the antenna 310 at the RF frequency of operation, fRF. When maximized in this way, the backscatter efficiency, nbs, is equal to
where a0 is the pressure-normalized fractional capacitance variation of the ultrasonic transducer 302, pinc is the peak acoustic pressure incident on the transducer, and Q is the effective quality factor of the combination of the transducer 302, passive network 320, and antenna 310 at fRF. In the case of the transducer 302 being a precharged CMUT, a0 may be about equal to 3.02×10−4 Pa−1, for example.
The RF transceiver circuitry 500 may include at least one antenna, such as RF antenna 502, for receiving and transmitting RF signals. In
The matching circuit 504 may be coupled to a circulator 506. In the example of
In the example of
In receive operation, the RF return signal from a tag is received via the antenna 502 and L-match circuit 504, and then flows into port 520E of the circulator 506 and flows out of the circulator and into the self-interference cancellation system at port 520B (RF_RX_IN). The output of the self-interference cancellation system is output at RF_RX_OUT 520C. The output 520C of the self-interference cancellation system represents the received RF return signal after self-interference cancellation. This output port at 520C is coupled to the analog-to-digital converter (ADC) 512, although in some implementations, the output port 520 signal is amplified before being provided to the ADC 512 (e.g., amplification provided internally by the self-interference cancellation circuitry 508 or amplified with an external amplifier coupled between the self-interference cancellation circuitry 508 and ADC 512). The digitized output signal 570 of the ADC 512 is then provided to downconversion and/or sideband detector circuitry, which in the example of
In some embodiments, some (if not all) of the downconversion and detection functionality (which is provided by the DDC 514 in the example of
Because the circulator 506 isolation and antenna 502/matching network 504 return loss are not infinite, part of the originally transmitted RF signal may also appear as received signal interference in the received RF signal port 520B. This self-interference between the RF signal transmission (e.g., at 145 MHz) and desired return RF signal (e.g., at 145 MHz±55.3 kHz) may be coincident in time (as the self-interference is always present) and may not be separated widely enough in frequency to allow for filtering before downconversion. To mitigate this self-interference effect, the reader 500 may include, as shown, the self-interference cancellation circuitry 508 before digitization at the ADC 512.
The self-interference cancellation circuitry 508 samples a fraction of the generated RF power 520D, passes it through a variable attenuator 550 and/or phase shifter 546, subtracts it from the signal 520B returning from the antenna 502, samples the resulting output 556, and modifies the attenuator 550 and/or phase shifter 546 settings to minimize (or optimize) the power of the sampled output 556.
Although
In some example embodiments, the selection of the optical wavelength is based on the motivation to maximize the amplitude of the received energy at the sidebands of the return RF signal 719 for a given reader-tag distance. In some embodiments, the selection of the optical wavelength and emitted intensity is based on eye and/or skin safety limits. In some implementations, the optical wavelength may be between 300 nm and 10 though other wavelengths may be used as well.
In some example embodiments, the selection of the optical modulation frequency (fmod) is based on the motivation to maximize the photodiode's fractional change in impedance for a given incident light intensity. In some example embodiments, fmod=100 kHz may be selected as the optical modulation frequency, although other frequencies may be used as well. In some example embodiments, the selection of the RF frequency, fRF, may be selected so that the RF frequency is sufficiently high to enable the use of correspondingly smaller, miniaturized antennas at the tag, while also considering the properties of the packaged tag photodiode. If, for example, the impedance of the packaged photodiode above about 100 MHz is primarily determined by the parasitics of the package itself rather than the photodiode's impedance, then, well above that frequency, any variation in this impedance created by incident light would not significantly vary the impedance load seen by the tag's RF antenna. In those example embodiments, fRF=145 MHz may be selected as the RF center frequency, although other RF frequencies may be used as well.
Although some of the examples refer to system operation at an RF frequency of 145 MHz and an optical modulation frequency of 100 kHz, the system may be operated at other frequencies as well. In some implementations, the RF center frequency may be between 100 kHz and 100 GHz, although other ranges may be realized as well, while the optical modulation frequency may be between 1 Hz and 1 GHz, although other ranges may be realized as well.
Referring again to
In the example of
As noted, the circuitry of the tag 712B may be considered passive circuitry as it does not include any active components (e.g., an amplifier) or require an independent power source, such as a battery, to couple the photodiode 722 and RF antenna 730 and then reradiate the return signal. The passive network 740 shown in
The photodiode 722 may be considered a device having electrical properties that vary as charge movement caused by incident light changes the depletion width of the photodiode. For example, the received light may change the impedance of the photodiode. This variation may cause the impedance load seen by the antenna 730 to change. The change in the impedance load modulates the reradiated RF return signal. In the frequency domain, this modulation caused in part by the photodiode appears as a first sideband at the RF center frequency (fRF) plus the optical modulation frequency (fmod) and a second sideband at the RF center frequency (fRF) minus the optical modulation frequency (fmod). In other words, the received light causes a variation of at least one property of the photodiode (which is coupled to the antenna). This variation of at least one property causes the RF signal which is received at the tag to be modulated such that the reradiated, return RF signal carries this modulation towards the reader. As noted, the reradiated, return RF signal represents a modified version (e.g., to include the modulation caused by the photodiode) of the received RF signal.
Regarding the backscatter efficiency, nbs, of the tag 712B, the backscatter efficiency may be maximized (in order to maximize the amount of the received RF signal that is reradiated in the sidebands of the transmitted RF return signal) when the photodiode 722 is impedance-matched to the antenna 730 at the RF frequency of operation, fRF.
In some example embodiments, the reader 710 of
The one or more readers 710 may localize the one or more tags 712A-C in a variety of ways. In some embodiments, the reader may perform time-of-flight-based localization by measuring t, which is the time difference between when the pulsed light is emitted and when it is detected in the modulation of the received RF signal. The distance from the reader to the tag would then be td/(2clight), where clight is the speed of light. As described further with respect to
In some example embodiments, each of the tags 712A-C may be configured to receive a first RF signal and receive an optical signal transmitted by the light emitter 756 at the reader. The tag may include a photodiode (which receives the optical signals transmitted by the reader) coupled, via a passive electrical circuit, to an RF antenna at the tag. This passive electrical circuit may impedance-match the photodiode to the tag's antenna at fRF. The incident light received by the photodiode varies the load impedance seen by the tag's antenna, changing the depletion width of the tag's photodiode. The reader 710 emits CW RF signals and pulsed optical signals towards the tags 712A-C.
Although some of the examples depict a 1-dimensional localization of tag 112B providing a distance to tag 112B, the position of tag 112B may be further localized to 2 or 3 dimensions.
r
tag=(ρ sin θ cos φ, ρ sin θ sin φ, ρ cos θ). (5)
In some example embodiments, there is provided a passive tag. The tag may include an antenna configured to receive a radio frequency signal and to reradiate a modified version of the received radio frequency signal. The passive tag may include an ultrasonic transducer coupled to the antenna. An ultrasound signal received by the ultrasonic transducer may cause a variation of at least one property of the ultrasonic transducer. This variation may impart a modulation onto the portion of the received radio frequency signal that is reradiated by the antenna.
In some example embodiments, the passive tag may receive a RF signal. The passive tag may impart or cause a modulation to be imparted on to the received radio frequency signal. And, the passive tag may then transmit, such as reradiate, the modulated signal. For example, if the radio frequency (RF) signal 115 is that is received is centered at fRF and the ultrasound is at fUS, the passive tag modules the received signal based on the ultrasound, and then transmits an RF signal centered at fRF with a first RF sideband at fRF plus fUS and a second RF sideband at fRF minus fUS.
In some example embodiments, the reader may include an ultrasonic transducer configured to transmit an ultrasound signal towards a passive tag being located by the system. The reader may also include at least one antenna configured to transmit a first radio frequency signal towards the passive tag and receive a second radio frequency signal from the passive tag, the second radio frequency signal including a modulation caused by the ultrasound signal received by the passive tag. The reader may also include detection circuitry to detect the modulation and provide an indication of a presence of the modulation on the received second radio frequency signal and/or an indication of a distance to the passive tag.
Although some examples refer to the tag as a passive tag, some embodiments may include power or an active device such as an amplifier.
In some example embodiments, there is provided a method. The method may include receiving, by an antenna at a tag such as a passive tag, a first radio frequency signal. The method may also include transmitting, by the antenna at the tag, a second radio frequency signal, wherein the second radio frequency signal is varied by an ultrasound signal received by an ultrasonic transducer coupled to the antenna and/or varied by an optical signal received by a photodiode.
In some example embodiments, there is provided a method. The method may include transmitting a first signal towards a tag being located by the system, the first signal comprising an ultrasound signal generated by an ultrasonic transducer and/or an optical signal generated by an optical emitter. The method may also include transmitting, by at least one antenna, a first radio frequency signal towards the tag. The method may also include receiving a second radio frequency signal from the tag, the second radio frequency signal including a modulation caused by the ultrasound signal received by the tag and/or the optical signal received by the tag. And, the method may include detecting the modulation and providing an indication of a presence of the modulation on the received second radio frequency signal and/or an indication of a distance to the tag.
The subject matter described herein can be embodied in systems, apparatus, methods, and/or articles depending on the desired configuration. The implementations set forth in the foregoing description do not represent all implementations consistent with the subject matter described herein. Instead, they are merely some examples consistent with aspects related to the described subject matter. Although a few variations have been described in detail above, other modifications or additions are possible. In particular, further features and/or variations can be provided in addition to those set forth herein. For example, the implementations described above can be directed to various combinations and subcombinations of the disclosed features and/or combinations and subcombinations of several further features disclosed above. In addition, the logic flows depicted in the accompanying figures and/or described herein do not necessarily require the particular order shown, or sequential order, to achieve desirable results. Other implementations may be within the scope of the following claims.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/935,993, filed on Nov. 15, 2019, and entitled “REMOTE PARAMETRIC DETECTION, LOCALIZATION, AND IDENTIFICATION OF PASSIVE TAGS,” the disclosure is incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
This invention was made with government support under contract FA9550-11-C-0028 awarded by Department of Defense, Air Force, Office of Scientific Research, National Defense Science and Engineering. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US20/60424 | 11/13/2020 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62935993 | Nov 2019 | US |