Pulse-echo sensing is the driving principle behind biological echolocation as well as biologically-inspired sonar and radar sensors. In biological echolocation, a single emitter sends a self-generated pulse into the environment which reflects off objects. A fraction of these reflections are captured by two receivers as echoes, from which information about the objects, such as their position in 3D space, can be deduced by means of timing, intensity and spectral analysis. This is opposed to frequency-modulated continuous-wave radar, which analyses the shift in frequency of the returning signal to determine distance, and requires an array of antenna to obtain directional information. In this work, we present a novel simulator which can generate synthetic pulse-echo measurements for a simulated sensor in a virtual environment. The simulation is implemented by replicating the relevant physical processes underlying the pulse-echo sensing modality, while achieving high performance at update rates above 50 Hz. The system is built to perform design space exploration of sensor hardware and software, with the goals of rapid prototyping and preliminary safety testing in mind. We demonstrate the validity of the simulator by replicating real-world experiments from previous work. In the first case, a subsumption architecture vehicle controller is set to navigate an unknown environment using the virtual sensor. We see the same trajectory pattern emerge in the simulated environment rebuilt from the real experiment, as well as similar activation times for the high-priority behaviors (±1.9%), and low-priority behaviors (±0.2%). In a second experiment, the simulated signals are used as input to a biologically-inspired direct simultaneous mapping and localization (SLAM) algorithm. Using only path integration, 83% of the positional errors are larger than 10 m, while for the SLAM algorithm 95% of the errors are smaller than 3.2 m. Additionally, we perform design space exploration using the simulator. By creating a synthetic radiation pattern with increased spatiospectral variance, we are able to reduce the average localization error of the system by 11%. From these results, we conclude that the simulation is sufficiently accurate to be of use in developing vehicle controllers and SLAM algorithms for pulse-echo radar sensors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s21020523 | DOI Listing |
Ultrasonics
September 2024
Applied Mechanics and Structure Safety Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, School of Mechanics and Aerospace Engineering, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu, Sichuan 611756, China. Electronic address:
It is of practical importance to emit a pure wave mode, focus its energy along a given direction, and then steer the wave beam in guide-wave-based structural health monitoring (SHM) because it can quickly scan the overall structure. Such a goal is usually realized using a two-dimensional (2D) phased array, which requires many transducer elements and expensive electronics. This work proposed a radar transducer (RD-T) for unidirectionally emitting and steering the fundamental shear horizontal wave (SH wave).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Biomed Eng
July 2024
Current imaging techniques in echography rely on the pulse-echo (PE) paradigm which provides a straight-forward access to the in-depth structure of tissues. They inherently face two major challenges: the limitation of the pulse repetition frequency, directly linked to the imaging framerate, and, due to the emission scheme, their blindness to the phenomena that happen in the medium during the majority of the acquisition time. To overcome these limitations, we propose a new paradigm for ultrasound imaging, denoted by continuous emission ultrasound imaging (CEUI) [1], for a single input single output (SISO) device.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
January 2021
CoSys-Lab, Faculty of Applied Engineering, University of Antwerp, 2020 Antwerpen, Belgium.
Pulse-echo sensing is the driving principle behind biological echolocation as well as biologically-inspired sonar and radar sensors. In biological echolocation, a single emitter sends a self-generated pulse into the environment which reflects off objects. A fraction of these reflections are captured by two receivers as echoes, from which information about the objects, such as their position in 3D space, can be deduced by means of timing, intensity and spectral analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
July 2020
Department of Neuroscience, Carney Institute, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912;
Big brown bats transmit wideband FM biosonar sounds that sweep from 55 to 25 kHz (first harmonic, FM1) and from 110 to 50 kHz (second harmonic, FM2). FM1 is required to perceive echo delay for target ranging; FM2 contributes only if corresponding FM1 frequencies are present. We show that echoes need only the lowest FM1 broadcast frequencies of 25 to 30 kHz for delay perception.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
November 2019
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York 14627, USA.
The issue of speckle statistics from ultrasound images of soft tissues such as the liver has a long and rich history. A number of theoretical distributions, some related to random scatterers or fades in optics and radar, have been formulated for pulse-echo interference patterns. This work proposes an alternative framework in which the dominant echoes are presumed to result from Born scattering from fluid-filled vessels that permeate the tissue parenchyma.
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