Drone Carry-on Weight and Wind Flow Assessment via Micro-Doppler Analysis
Dmytro Vovchuk, Oleg Torgovitsky, Mykola Khobzei, Vladyslav Tkach, Sergey Geyman, Anton Kharchevskii, Andrey Sheleg, Toms Salgals, Vjaceslavs Bobrovs, Shai Gizach, Aviel Glam, Niv Haim Mizrahi, Alexander Liberzon, and Pavel Ginzburg

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that micro-Doppler radar analysis can distinguish between the effects of wind and payload weight on drones, enabling remote monitoring of drone conditions through spectral analysis.
Contribution
The study introduces a systematic method to separate wind and payload effects on drones using micro-Doppler spectral analysis, validated in controlled environments.
Findings
Micro-Doppler shifts correlate with payload weight.
Wind-induced tilt causes spectral splitting.
Method effectively distinguishes wind and weight effects.
Abstract
Remote monitoring of drones has become a global objective due to emerging applications in national security and managing aerial delivery traffic. Despite their relatively small size, drones can carry significant payloads, which require monitoring, especially in cases of unauthorized transportation of dangerous goods. A drone's flight dynamics heavily depend on outdoor wind conditions and the carry-on weight, which affect the tilt angle of a drone's body and the rotation velocity of the blades. A surveillance radar can capture both effects, provided a sufficient signal-to-noise ratio for the received echoes and an adjusted postprocessing detection algorithm. Here, we conduct a systematic study to demonstrate that micro-Doppler analysis enables the disentanglement of the impacts of wind and weight on a hovering drone. The physics behind the effect is related to the flight controller, as…
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