Publication | Closed Access
Influence of layer roughness for road survey by ground penetrating radar at nadir: theoretical study
27
Citations
20
References
2011
Year
Highway PavementEngineeringLayer RoughnessRoad SurveyGeotechnical EngineeringTheoretical StudyRotational Invariance TechniquesImaging RadarRadar Signal ProcessingComputational ElectromagneticsRough PavementSynthetic Aperture RadarStructural Health MonitoringInverse ProblemsRadar ApplicationSignal ProcessingRadarRadar ScatteringCivil EngineeringRadar Image ProcessingGround-penetrating Radar
In civil engineering, conventional methods used to estimate the thickness of pavements assume flat interfaces. In contrast, this study uses a rigorous electromagnetic method called propagation-inside-layer-expansion (PILE) to simulate the radar backscattered signal at nadir from a rough pavement made up of two rough interfaces separating homogeneous media. The statistical distribution of the first two echoes is studied by comparison with the default flat case, together with their frequency behaviour. Within the scope of road pavement survey by ground penetrating radar, the scattering model is finally used to assess the performance of the estimation of signal parameters via rotational invariance techniques (ESPRIT) algorithm, one of the well-known high-resolution time-delay estimation techniques.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1