COMPUTATIONAL POLARIMETRIC IMAGING USING TWO-DIMENSIONAL DYNAMIC METASURFACE APERTURES

Computational Polarimetric Imaging Using Two-Dimensional Dynamic Metasurface Apertures

Computational Polarimetric Imaging Using Two-Dimensional Dynamic Metasurface Apertures

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In afck benchmade this paper, we present a two-dimensional dynamic metasurface aperture to perform computational polarimetric microwave imaging for the first time.First, a novel tunable dual-polarized metamaterial radiator element integrated with two PIN diodes is designed to radiate and capture crossand co-polarized field components.The diodes placed in orthogonal positions are simultaneously switched on or off to configure the transmit and receive polarization states.

In diode on state, the metamaterial elements are in off state and the element radiated power is low whereas in diode off state, the metamaterial elements are in on state and the element radiated power is high.By sparsely reconfiguring and random assignment of the developed metamaterial elements across the array aperture, dynamic modulation of the radiated fields is achieved.Using this principle, we synthesize polarimetric, spatio-temporally incoherent wave-chaotic modes that facilitate polarimetric computational imaging.

Leveraging the novelty of the dualpolarized dynamic characteristics of the wave-chaotic radiation, polarimetric imaging is computed in the near-field region at K-band frequencies and the polarimetric responses of specific targets t5 dermatome are retrieved.The approach is verified by electromagnetic full-wave simulations, and imaging a T-shaped object consisting of two orthogonal metal strips, it is demonstrated that the target characteristics from a set of backscatter measurements compressed by the developed dynamic metasurface antenna.

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