Remote Sensing (Aug 2024)
A Method for Extracting Acoustic Water Surface Waves Based on Phase Compensation
Abstract
With the increasing demand for marine biosensing and water–air collaborative rescue in national production and life, establishing a robust cross-medium communication link has become one of the hotspots. Among them, microwave acoustic cross-medium uplink communication technology has been widely studied for its advantages of being able to be used all day and in all weather, there being no need for relay, and having high concealment. The principle is to extract the frequency of the acoustic water surface waves from the phase history of the radar echoes. However, wave interference can cause discontinuity of the phase history, resulting in difficulty in extracting the acoustic water surface waves and an increase in bit error rate (BER). This article analyses the reasons for the discontinuity of phase history and innovatively proposes a method for extracting acoustic water surface waves based on phase compensation. The discontinuity points of the phase history are compensated based on whether the range bin changes. Then, low-frequency water surface fluctuations and discontinuity points are filtered out through second-order differential joint outlier removal, which can effectively reduce the influence of phase history discontinuity on time–frequency analysis and communication decoding. The effectiveness of the proposed method was verified through simulations and experiments. The experimental results indicate that the BER of the proposed method is 25% of that of the Wavelet–Kalman Filtering method. The proposed method provides a new approach for microwave acoustic cross-medium uplink communication.
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