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An experimental study on antipersonnel landmine detection using acoustic-to-seismic coupling
86
Citations
14
References
2003
Year
Humanitarian Demining MissionEngineeringSeismic WaveAcoustic SensorAntipersonnel Landmine DetectionEarth ScienceGeotechnical EngineeringGeophysicsLaser Doppler VibrometerAcoustical EngineeringEarthquake EngineeringAcoustic WavesSynthetic Aperture RadarStructural Health MonitoringSignal ProcessingRadarSeismologySeismic Reflection ProfilingCivil EngineeringGround Vibration
An acoustic-to-seismic system to detect buried antipersonnel mines exploits airborne acoustic waves penetrating the surface of the ground. Acoustic waves radiating from a sound source above the ground excite Biot type I and II compressional waves in the porous soil. The type I wave and type II waves refract toward the normal and cause air and soil particle motion. If a landmine is buried below the surface of the insonified area, these waves are scattered or reflected by the target, resulting in distinct changes to the acoustically coupled ground motion. A scanning laser Doppler vibrometer measures the motion of the ground surface. In the past, this technique has been employed with remarkable success in locating antitank mines during blind field tests [Sabatier and Xiang, IEEE Trans. Geosci. Remote Sens. 39, 1146-1154 (2001)]. The humanitarian demining mission requires an ability to locate antipersonnel mines, requiring a surmounting of additional challenges due to a plethora of shapes and smaller sizes. This paper describes an experimental study on the methods used to locate antipersonnel landmines in recent field measurements.
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