Filtering by
- All Subjects: Radar
- Creators: Electrical Engineering Program
- Creators: Richmond, Christ
for different wireless modalities, like radar and communication systems, to share the
available bandwidth. One approach to realize coexistence successfully is for each
system to adopt a transmit waveform with a unique nonlinear time-varying phase
function. At the receiver of the system of interest, the waveform received for process-
ing may still suffer from low signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) due to the
presence of the waveforms that are matched to the other coexisting systems. This
thesis uses a time-frequency based approach to increase the SINR of a system by estimating the unique nonlinear instantaneous frequency (IF) of the waveform matched
to the system. Specifically, the IF is estimated using the synchrosqueezing transform,
a highly localized time-frequency representation that also enables reconstruction of
individual waveform components. As the IF estimate is biased, modified versions of
the transform are investigated to obtain estimators that are both unbiased and also
matched to the unique nonlinear phase function of a given waveform. Simulations
using transmit waveforms of coexisting wireless systems are provided to demonstrate
the performance of the proposed approach using both biased and unbiased IF estimators.
We present in this paper a method to compare scene classification accuracy of C-band Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and optical images utilizing both classical and quantum computing algorithms. This REU study uses data from the Sentinel satellite. The dataset contains (i) synthetic aperture radar images collected from the Sentinel-1 satellite and (ii) optical images for the same area as the SAR images collected from the Sentinel-2 satellite. We utilize classical neural networks to classify four classes of images. We then use Quantum Convolutional Neural Networks and deep learning techniques to take advantage of machine learning to help the system train, learn, and identify at a higher classification accuracy. A hybrid Quantum-classical model that is trained on the Sentinel1-2 dataset is proposed, and the performance is then compared against the classical in terms of classification accuracy.