Proc. SPIE 5089, Detection and Remediation Technologies for Mines and Minelike Targets VIII, pg 1189 (11 September 2003); doi: 10.1117/12.487145
The recently developed physics-based "mean field" formalism for
efficiently computing the time-domain response of compact metallic
targets is applied to the solution of model inverse problems for
remote classification of buried UXO-like targets. The formalism is
first used to compute model forward scattering data, in the form
of time-domain decay curves as measured by EMI or magnetic field,
for a sequence of canonical ellipsoidal target shapes of various
geometries. This data is subsequently used as input to a genetic
algorithm-based inversion routine, in which the target parameter
model space, comprised of target shape, conductivity, location,
orientation, etc., is efficiently searched to find the best fit to
the data. Global search procedures, such as genetic algorithms,
typically require the forward scattering solution for hundreds, or
perhaps thousands, of candidate target models. To be practical,
these forward solutions must be rapidly computable. Our solution
approach has been specifically designed to meet this requirement. Of special interest is the ability of the inversion algorithm to
distinguish robustly between UXO-like targets, modelled here as
cylindrically shaped prolate spheroids, and, say, flat sheet-like
clutter targets, modelled as very thin oblate spheroids.