Littoral Assessment of Mine Burial Signatures (LAMBS) buried land mine/background spectral signature analyses
The objective of the Office of Naval Research (ONR) Rapid Overt Reconnaissance (ROR) program and the Airborne Littoral Reconnaissance Technologies (ALRT) project's LAMBS effort is to determine if electro-optical spectral discriminants exist that are useful for the detection of land mines in littoral regions. Statistically significant buried mine overburden and background signature data were collected over a wide spectral range (0.35 to 14 ??m) to identify robust spectral features that might serve as discriminants for new airborne sensor concepts. LAMBS has expanded previously collected databases to littoral areas - primarily dry and wet sandy soils - where tidal, surf, and wind conditions can severely modify spectral signatures. At AeroSense 2003, we reported completion of three buried mine collections at an inland bay, Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico beach sites.1 We now report LAMBS spectral database analyses results using metrics which characterize the detection performance of general types of spectral detection algorithms. These metrics include mean contrast, spectral signal-to-clutter, covariance, information content, and spectral matched filter analyses. Detection performance of the buried land mines was analyzed with regard to burial age, background type, and environmental conditions. These analyses considered features observed due to particle size differences, surface roughness, surface moisture, and compositional differences.
Citation Information
Publication Year | 2004 |
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Title | Littoral Assessment of Mine Burial Signatures (LAMBS) buried land mine/background spectral signature analyses |
DOI | 10.1117/12.542754 |
Authors | A.C. Kenton, D.M. Geci, K.J. Ray, C.M. Thomas, J.W. Salisbury, J.C. Mars, J.K. Crowley, N.H. Witherspoon, J.H. Holloway |
Publication Type | Conference Paper |
Publication Subtype | Conference Paper |
Index ID | 70026140 |
Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |