Broadband radar invisibility with time-dependent metasurfaces

Abstract Concealing objects from interrogation has been a primary objective since the integration of radars into surveillance systems. Metamaterial-based invisibility cloaking, which was considered a promising solution, did not yet succeed in delivering reliable performance against real radar system...

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Main Authors: V. Kozlov, D. Vovchuk, P. Ginzburg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-07-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-93600-2
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spelling doaj-511f4adb7a144789a9b79c332df4952d2021-07-11T11:28:27ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-07-0111111110.1038/s41598-021-93600-2Broadband radar invisibility with time-dependent metasurfacesV. Kozlov0D. Vovchuk1P. Ginzburg2School of Electrical Engineering, Tel Aviv UniversitySchool of Electrical Engineering, Tel Aviv UniversitySchool of Electrical Engineering, Tel Aviv UniversityAbstract Concealing objects from interrogation has been a primary objective since the integration of radars into surveillance systems. Metamaterial-based invisibility cloaking, which was considered a promising solution, did not yet succeed in delivering reliable performance against real radar systems, mainly due to its narrow operational bandwidth. Here we propose an approach, which addresses the issue from a signal-processing standpoint and, as a result, is capable of coping with the vast majority of unclassified radar systems by exploiting vulnerabilities in their design. In particular, we demonstrate complete concealment of a 0.25 square meter moving metal plate from an investigating radar system, operating in a broad frequency range approaching 20% bandwidth around the carrier of 1.5 GHz. The key element of the radar countermeasure is a temporally modulated coating. This auxiliary structure is designed to dynamically and controllably adjust the reflected phase of the impinging radar signal, which acquires a user-defined Doppler shift. A special case of interest is imposing a frequency shift that compensates for the real Doppler signatures originating from the motion of the target. In this case the radar will consider the target static, even though it is moving. As a result, the reflected echo will be discarded by the clutter removal filter, which is an inherent part of any modern radar system that is designed to operate in real conditions. This signal-processing loophole allows rendering the target invisible to the radar even though it scatters electromagnetic radiation.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-93600-2
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author V. Kozlov
D. Vovchuk
P. Ginzburg
spellingShingle V. Kozlov
D. Vovchuk
P. Ginzburg
Broadband radar invisibility with time-dependent metasurfaces
Scientific Reports
author_facet V. Kozlov
D. Vovchuk
P. Ginzburg
author_sort V. Kozlov
title Broadband radar invisibility with time-dependent metasurfaces
title_short Broadband radar invisibility with time-dependent metasurfaces
title_full Broadband radar invisibility with time-dependent metasurfaces
title_fullStr Broadband radar invisibility with time-dependent metasurfaces
title_full_unstemmed Broadband radar invisibility with time-dependent metasurfaces
title_sort broadband radar invisibility with time-dependent metasurfaces
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Concealing objects from interrogation has been a primary objective since the integration of radars into surveillance systems. Metamaterial-based invisibility cloaking, which was considered a promising solution, did not yet succeed in delivering reliable performance against real radar systems, mainly due to its narrow operational bandwidth. Here we propose an approach, which addresses the issue from a signal-processing standpoint and, as a result, is capable of coping with the vast majority of unclassified radar systems by exploiting vulnerabilities in their design. In particular, we demonstrate complete concealment of a 0.25 square meter moving metal plate from an investigating radar system, operating in a broad frequency range approaching 20% bandwidth around the carrier of 1.5 GHz. The key element of the radar countermeasure is a temporally modulated coating. This auxiliary structure is designed to dynamically and controllably adjust the reflected phase of the impinging radar signal, which acquires a user-defined Doppler shift. A special case of interest is imposing a frequency shift that compensates for the real Doppler signatures originating from the motion of the target. In this case the radar will consider the target static, even though it is moving. As a result, the reflected echo will be discarded by the clutter removal filter, which is an inherent part of any modern radar system that is designed to operate in real conditions. This signal-processing loophole allows rendering the target invisible to the radar even though it scatters electromagnetic radiation.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-93600-2
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