TY - JOUR
T1 - Micro-Doppler-Coded Drone Identification via Resonant Tagging
AU - Vovchuk, Dmytro
AU - Khobzei, Mykola
AU - Tkach, Vladyslav
AU - Eliiashiv, Oleg
AU - Tzidki, Omer
AU - Grotov, Konstantin
AU - Glam, Aviel
AU - Ginzburg, Pavel
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 1963-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - The forthcoming era of massive drone delivery deployment in urban environments raises a need to develop reliable control and monitoring systems. While active solutions, i.e., wireless sharing of a real-time location between air traffic participants and control units, are of use, developing additional security layers is appealing. Among various surveillance systems, radars offer distinct advantages by operating effectively in harsh weather conditions and providing high-resolution reliable detection over extended ranges. However, contrary to traditional airborne targets, small drones and copters pose a significant problem for radar systems due to their relatively small radar cross-sections. Here, we propose an efficient approach to label drones by attaching passive resonant scatterers to their rotor blades. While blades themselves generate micro-Doppler rotor-specific signatures, those are typically hard to capture at large distances owing to small signal-to-noise ratios in radar echoes. Furthermore, drones from the same vendor are indistinguishable by their micro-Doppler signatures. Here we demonstrate that equipping the blades with multiple resonant scatterers not only extends the drone detection range but also assigns it a unique micro-Doppler encoded identifier. By extrapolating the results of our laboratory and outdoor experiments to real high-grade radar surveillance systems, we estimate that the clear-sky identification range for a small drone is approximately 3-5 kilometers, whereas it would be barely detectable at 1000 meters if not labeled. This performance places the proposed passive system on par with its active counterparts, offering the clear benefits of reliability and resistance to jamming.
AB - The forthcoming era of massive drone delivery deployment in urban environments raises a need to develop reliable control and monitoring systems. While active solutions, i.e., wireless sharing of a real-time location between air traffic participants and control units, are of use, developing additional security layers is appealing. Among various surveillance systems, radars offer distinct advantages by operating effectively in harsh weather conditions and providing high-resolution reliable detection over extended ranges. However, contrary to traditional airborne targets, small drones and copters pose a significant problem for radar systems due to their relatively small radar cross-sections. Here, we propose an efficient approach to label drones by attaching passive resonant scatterers to their rotor blades. While blades themselves generate micro-Doppler rotor-specific signatures, those are typically hard to capture at large distances owing to small signal-to-noise ratios in radar echoes. Furthermore, drones from the same vendor are indistinguishable by their micro-Doppler signatures. Here we demonstrate that equipping the blades with multiple resonant scatterers not only extends the drone detection range but also assigns it a unique micro-Doppler encoded identifier. By extrapolating the results of our laboratory and outdoor experiments to real high-grade radar surveillance systems, we estimate that the clear-sky identification range for a small drone is approximately 3-5 kilometers, whereas it would be barely detectable at 1000 meters if not labeled. This performance places the proposed passive system on par with its active counterparts, offering the clear benefits of reliability and resistance to jamming.
KW - Drone Identification
KW - machine learning
KW - micro-Doppler signature
KW - sticker labeling
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85218130405&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1109/TAP.2025.3540278
DO - https://doi.org/10.1109/TAP.2025.3540278
M3 - مقالة
SN - 0018-926X
JO - IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation
JF - IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation
ER -