Aerotenna Technology White Paper
Aerotenna Technology White Paper
Aerotenna Technology White Paper
Using Frequency Modulation Continuous Wave (FMCW), Aerotenna radar sensing technology can
detect both moving and stationary targets, and provide the range, velocity, and angle of the
recognized targets. The distance between the radar and target is calculated from the frequency
difference, or beat frequency, between the transmitted signal and received echo signal. The relative
velocity of a target can be determined by measuring the Doppler frequency shift in the received echo.
The phase differences between two or more receiving antennas can be used to measure the location
of the target, or azimuth angle.
Figure 1 shows the example of transmitting and receiving waveform, in which 𝛥𝑓1 and 𝛥𝑓2
are the frequency differences on the two edges between the transmitted signal
and receiving signal and 𝑓d is the Doppler frequency shift caused by the
movement of the target. So, the beat frequency is calculated by:
𝑓d = (Δ𝑓1 + Δ𝑓2)/2 and the Doppler frequency of a moving target is:
𝑓d = |Δ𝑓1 + Δ𝑓2 |/2. The distance between target and radar is proportional to
the beat frequency, which can be derived as 𝑟 = 𝑓b 𝑐𝑇/(2𝐵), where 𝑐 is the
speed of light, 𝑇 is the period of the up-down chirp and 𝐵 is the bandwidth of
the transmitted signal.
With advanced algorithms, our solutions are able to provide smooth, above ground altimeter
measurements for water surface and bushes; other sensors may be confused by jittering
measurements in such environment. In addition, Aerotenna has developed the intelligence to
accurately detect items that are commonly found while flying in urban environments, items such as
cars, buildings, pedestrians, power lines, and tree branches. Our solutions can even reliably detect
small items such as city power lines within 0-5 meters range. With Aerotenna sensing solutions, UAVs
will have the ability to fly and land safely by detecting and avoiding these objects autonomously.
Aerotenna radar technology powered altimeter is ideal for UAV applications requiring a 0-150 meter
range and 2 cm accuracy, including operations such as precision agriculture and last-mile
e-commerce delivery. They are excellent solutions for autonomous takeoff, landing, and way-point
navigation, and maintaining a target altitude during flight.
Aerotenna radar technology powered sense-and-avoid sensors scan 360 degrees without blind spots,
detecting and locating obstacles on the horizon quickly and reliably, allowing for correction of flight
course and collision prevention. The system incorporates adaptive sensing technology that adjusts
the sensing range based on flying speed (up to 200m), and optimizes its response; it is ideal for
applications that require high resolution, in-flight sensing and collision avoidance for walls, buildings,
tree branches and other obstacles in outdoor environments.
Aerotenna altimeter and sense-and-avoid radars are the building blocks for autonomous UAVs. They
provide peace of mind with UAVs that will fly safely regardless of weather conditions and types of
surfaces encountered.
Ultra-Low Power Consumption: We have given special considerations to reduce the power
consumption of our radar products. Aerotenna radar technology empowered sensors consume merely
1.25W or less at 5V, 250mA; whereas traditional radar sensors typically consume 25W and above. This
power consumption shift allows UAVs to fly longer without recharge.
Ultimate Ease of Integration: Aerotenna radar technology powered sensing solutions support multiple
I/O interfaces, including UART, I2C and CAN. Our solutions self-calibrate automatically based on
collected geometrics information, so users don’t need to—simply plug and play to integrate with UAV
flight controller.
Aerotenna is the first to introduce the SoC FPGA-based flight control solution to address autonomous
UAV needs. The OcPoC flight controller, a system-on-chip processor composed of an FPGA and a
dual-core ARM processor, conducts radar signal and autonomous flight control processing. This control
solution functions as the brain of the smart drone, providing clear advantages over the
micro-controller unit (MCU), in terms of processing power and I/O capability.
Industrial Grade Redundancy: OcPoC flight controllers are designed to function in cases of unexpected
system component failures during flight. To ensure continued flight for urgent missions,
triple-redundancy for critical components—such as GPS, IMU, and more—are built into the system.
Developer Friendly: The OcPoC flight controllers are able to run a variety of embedded operating
systems, such as Linux, making it easy to develop and modify. The controllers support popular
open-source software suites, such as PX4 and ArduPilot, and come with Aerotenna collision-avoidance
algorithms which offer added intelligence in idea and solutions development. Aerotenna simplifies the
development process, putting every idea within reach.
Key Contacts:
Zongbo Wang, Ph.D. - Founder & CEO - [email protected]
Yan Li - Sensing Team Lead - [email protected]
Dave Royer - Flight Controller Team Lead - [email protected]