DocumentCode :
1645459
Title :
Terahertz-frequency remote-sensing of biological warfare agents
Author :
Woolard, D.L. ; Brown, E.R. ; Samuels, A.C. ; Jensen, J.O. ; Globus, T. ; Gelmont, B. ; Wolski, M.
Author_Institution :
Army Res. Lab., Army Res. Office, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA
Volume :
2
fYear :
2003
Firstpage :
763
Abstract :
This paper presents a detailed assessment of terahertz-frequency spectroscopy as a technique for the remote detection of biological warfare agents. Design studies are presented for a differential-absorption-radar (DAR) approach that utilizes the spectral signatures of Bacillus (B.) subtillus spores within the terahertz (THz) regime as the detection mechanism. The signature data used in these studies is taken from laboratory measurements performed on uniform thin films of B. Subtillus spores and the system performance is assessed for both incoherent and coherent detector modalities. These studies consider DAR remote sensing of biological (bin) clouds at significant ranges (i.e., 1 km) and include the effects of realistic atmospheric conditions. A high-level remote-sensor design is used to estimate the probabilities of detection (p/sub d/) and false-alarm (p/sub fa/) associated with this general technique. These studies suggest useful remote-detection performance can be achieved (i.e., p/sub d/ > 0.9 & p/sub ra/ 10/sup -4/ for bio-cloud densities <10/sup 3/ cm/sup -3/) at 1 km ranges if the THz signature information remains predictably stable under varying atmospheric conditions (e.g., changes in humidity, spore activity state, etc). Furthermore, a realistic bio-agent airframe attack scenario is utilized to demonstrate standoff detection of bio-clouds with /spl sim/100% confidence while outside the threat-level concentrations. All together, these results demonstrate that standoff detection of bio-agents is feasible for threat-level concentrations in practical battlefield environments at sufficient ranges to provide for early warning.
Keywords :
biosensors; military radar; remote sensing by radar; submillimetre wave spectroscopy; 1 km; Bacillis subtillus spores; biological cloud; biological warfare agent; detection probability; differential absorption radar; false alarm probability; remote sensing; terahertz frequency spectroscopy; thin film; Atmospheric measurements; Clouds; Detectors; Fungi; Laboratories; Performance evaluation; Remote sensing; Spectroscopy; System performance; Transistors;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Microwave Symposium Digest, 2003 IEEE MTT-S International
Conference_Location :
Philadelphia, PA, USA
ISSN :
0149-645X
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7695-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MWSYM.2003.1212483
Filename :
1212483
Link To Document :
بازگشت