Xinchen Du , Chunrui Wang , Haoran Zhou , Yunfeng Zhang , Jin Guo , Fei Chen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Laser active detection technology utilizing the cat’s eye effect is widely applied in rapid reconnaissance, positioning, and target information acquisition. This paper examines the theory of the cat’s eye effect in optical systems and its application in the field of laser active detection. This study assesses the development trend of this technology and the feasibility of implementing long-range target laser active detection. Initially, the working principle of the laser active detection system based on the cat’s eye effect is elucidated. Additionally, this paper compares and analyzes three methods of laser active detection using the cat’s eye effect: geometric optics, physical optics, and angular spectrum propagation. Subsequently, the characteristics and processing methods of cat’s eye target echo data are investigated. Finally, the paper summarizes the main challenges of this technology and assesses its development trends based on engineering requirements. The application of the cat’s eye effect in laser active reconnaissance involves linking the cat’s eye optical system with the target’s optical structure and motion state, optimizing data extraction and recognition algorithms to acquire multidimensional feature information, and enabling real-time detection of high-speed moving targets.
Results in PhysicsMATERIALS SCIENCE, MULTIDISCIPLINARYPHYSIC-PHYSICS, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
CiteScore
8.70
自引率
9.40%
发文量
754
审稿时长
50 days
期刊介绍:
Results in Physics is an open access journal offering authors the opportunity to publish in all fundamental and interdisciplinary areas of physics, materials science, and applied physics. Papers of a theoretical, computational, and experimental nature are all welcome. Results in Physics accepts papers that are scientifically sound, technically correct and provide valuable new knowledge to the physics community. Topics such as three-dimensional flow and magnetohydrodynamics are not within the scope of Results in Physics.
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3. Letters to the Editor: Letters discussing a recent article published in Results in Physics are welcome. These are objective, constructive, or educational critiques of papers published in Results in Physics. Accepted letters will be sent to the author of the original paper for a response. Each letter and response is published together. Letters should be received within 8 weeks of the article''s publication. They should not exceed 750 words of text and 10 references.