Elgy, James2024-05-052024-05-052018-11-15Elgy, James (2018). X Ray Eyes: Seeing Through Walls Using Radar. Cranfield Online Research Data (CORD). Figure. https://doi.org/10.17862/cranfield.rd.7346309.v1https://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/21492Digital Image presented at the 2018 Defence and Security Doctoral Symposium.This image represents current research into ground-based applications of radar imaging in a through-wall context. Utilising different measurement geometries and signal processing, the aim is to gather and disseminate low-frequency synthetic aperture radar data to identify building structure and content. This image shows volumetric synthetic aperture radar data gathered in a multistatic modality, i.e. where there are two independent receiving antennas, both on the far side of the wall. This is superimposed onto a photograph of the same area, showing good agreement between the visual and radar images. For clarity, the point cloud has been segmented into different regions, each given a separate colour. Red represents the two metal barrels, blue shows the desk area whilst green represents the wall signature.CC BY 4.0'Through-wall-radar''Multistatic''Synthetic Aperture Radar''DSDS18 digital image''DSDS18''Image Processing''Signal Processing'X Ray Eyes: Seeing Through Walls Using RadarImage10.17862/cranfield.rd.7346309.v1