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The information below describes how the “CFAR point cloud” output from a radar is derived from the radar’s view of the environment surrounding it.

This mode is just one approach to extracting features from the scene that the radar presents.

The International Research Journal of Engineering and Technology (IRJET) Volume: 05 Issue: 07 describes Constant False Alarm Rate (CFAR) Detection as

an adaptive algorithm used in Radar systems to detect the target echoes against a background of noise and clutter. The role of the constant false alarm rate circuit is to determine the threshold above which any returning signal or echo can be considered probably to be originated from a target. In most radar systems, the threshold is set to achieve a required false alarm rate (or equivalently, probability of false alarm). Cell-Averaging CFAR (CA - CFAR) is a type of CFAR detection where the threshold is estimated by scanning a block of cells around a cell-under-test (CUT) and calculating the average power level. In CA – CFAR, a target is declared to be present if the power level in the CUT exceeds the average power level found from adjacent block of cells. This paper shows the principle of CA – CFAR detector, threshold factors for CFAR detection, factors affecting CFAR detection and CFAR loss

The subsequent text of that article expands on the technicalities around Cell-Averaging-CFAR.

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The images below have been captured from a simple CA-CFAR calculation sheet, working with a single azimuth of raw radar output. The calculation sheet can be downloaded here:

Attachments
uploadfalse
patterns*.xlsx

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