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Published byJoel Rich Modified over 9 years ago
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OBSERVATIONAL VALIDATION OF AVIAN RADAR SYSTEMS Wendell Bunch Edwin Herricks, PhD
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Introduction Existing airport surveillance radars – Designed for air and ground traffic control – Not readily adaptable for wildlife purposes Avian radar systems – Digital processing added to COTS marine radar and optimized for bird detection – X-band and S-band – New technology w/few users and no airport experience
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CEAT Performance Assessment Multiple year program assessing avian radar systems at civil airports Initial efforts intended to understand radar physics/system abilities A critical issue is validation of capabilities of avian target detection and tracking Visual observation of birds
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CEAT Validation Efforts Address ground-truth issues Validate in airport settings Use target rich environment of Whidbey Island to conduct long term observations Coordinate with IVAR efforts Evaluate methods
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Issues identified in ground-truth efforts and validation studies – observers challenge radar detection – radars challenge observers and methods – visualizing the beam coverage (height and width) – locating specific targets – judging distance and altitude
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Location: NAS Whidbey Island WA
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Primary sensor X-band radar 3cm wave length
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Method of visual observation – 30X spotting scope aligned to true north – radar computer and watch synced ± 1 sec – data collected in high and low clutter areas – viewing angles separated by 20 degrees – two view samples at each angle, high/low – 20 second sample periods – data collected: date/time, family or specie, number of birds, general direction of travel, bearing target observed – time stamp when target on vertical center of spotting scope
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Findings Detection Issues: Aspect/RCS Aspect -relation of the target to radar beam RCS - effective target area, changes with aspect RCS must exceed level of clutter
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Clutter: Ground and Sea Undesirable radar returns Sea clutter – tracks short high speed Wind speed/direction determined effect
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Ground and Sea Clutter
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Effects of sea clutter on tracking
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Detection Issues: cont. Position Relative to Clutter – gulls: >20, <20, <5 – Large sea ducks: CEAT and IVAR – RCS? Flight Behavior – constant heading = consistent tracking – un-predictable flight challenges all radar – shadowing in flocks Duration of Flight – must be long enough
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Detection Issues: cont. Weather – rain/snow hinders detection and tracking – can generate large numbers of detections and tracks – tracks of short duration with speeds similar to birds
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Observation Issues weather conditions hindered use of spotting scope in strong winds/rain range to targets difficult to estimate limited to daylight hours
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Validation Methods Requirements to validate target time, direction of travel, bearing, within beam dimensions for the bearing archived radar data replayed two examples
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Surf scoter - 305
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Bonaparte’s Gull - 601
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Conclusions – Avian radar capable of tracking bird sized targets – Researchers have shown radar can track movement over larger areas than visual observations – Research needed: potential to monitor bird activities while evaluating limitations of location and radar physics – NAS Whidbey research has shown limitations with the current technology
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Conclusion cont. Factors Compromising Detection – target aspect – target size – flight behavior – target position relative to clutter – overall clutter environment – weather
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Conclusions cont. Use of Avian Radar Systems – careful evaluation of clutter levels to ensure tracking in desired area – will require some level of validation – more complex environments = more validation
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QUESTIONS?
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