Patents by Inventor MICHAEL NICOLLS

MICHAEL NICOLLS has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 11592549
    Abstract: Technologies for calibrating radars and tracking space objects. Some of such technologies enable a technique for calibrating a radar based on using -A- an elemental antenna (308), which can be embedded on a housing hosting a set of antenna elements, or -B- an antenna (146) mounted to a reflector. Some of such technologies enable a radar site containing a first 1D phased array (112) and a second 1D phased array (112), where the first 1D phased array sends a set of signals and receives a set of reflections based on the set of signals, and the second 1D phased array receives the set of reflections.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 11, 2020
    Date of Patent: February 28, 2023
    Assignee: LeoLabs, Inc.
    Inventors: Michael Nicolls, John Buonocore, Daniel Ceperley, Edward Lu, Steven Chen, Christopher Rosner, Matthew Stevenson, Craig Trumbull, Gerald Wong, Matthew Adelman, Inkwan Park, Nathan Griffith, Sanado Barolli
  • Publication number: 20220376389
    Abstract: Some of such technologies enable a technique for calibrating a radar based on using—A—an elemental antenna, which can be embedded on a housing hosting a set of antenna elements, or—B—an antenna mounted to a reflector (108). Some of such technologies enable a radar site containing a first ID phased array (112) and a second ID phased array (112), where the first ID phased array sends a set of signals and receives a set of reflections based on the set of signals, and the second ID phased array receives the set of reflections.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 11, 2020
    Publication date: November 24, 2022
    Inventors: Michael Nicolls, John Buonocore, Christopher Rosner, Matthew Adelman, Matthew Stevenson
  • Publication number: 20220350012
    Abstract: Technologies for calibrating radars and tracking space objects. Some of such technologies enable a technique for calibrating a radar based on using -A- an elemental antenna (308), which can be embedded on a housing hosting a set of antenna elements, or -B- an antenna (146) mounted to a reflector. Some of such technologies enable a radar site containing a first 1D phased array (112) and a second 1D phased array (112), where the first 1D phased array sends a set of signals and receives a set of reflections based on the set of signals, and the second 1D phased array receives the set of reflections.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 11, 2020
    Publication date: November 3, 2022
    Inventors: Michael Nicolls, John Buonocore, Daniel Ceperley, Edward Lu, Steven Chen, Christopher Rosner, Matthew Stevenson, Craig Trumbull, Gerald Wong, Matthew Adelman, Inkwan Park, Nathan Griffith, Sanado Barolli
  • Patent number: 11378685
    Abstract: This disclosure enables various technologies for determining space object attitude stabilities from radar cross-section statistics. In particular, such determinations can be made via employing various phased-array radars with various fields of views, which can monitor various space objects (e.g., satellites, space debris, rocket bodies, space stations) over various periods of time (e.g., minutes, hours, days, weeks, months) as the space objects come into the fields of views. For example, a technique for estimating attitude stability of low-Earth RSOs using RCS statistics from various radars (e.g., group of radars, phased-array radar network). Assuming a non-isotropic shape, an Earth-oriented RSO can have an elevation-angle dependent RCS when viewed from a ground-based radar. Therefore, an RSO attitude stability can be tested by looking for a difference in a median or mean RCS when the RSO is viewed at different elevation angles.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 18, 2019
    Date of Patent: July 5, 2022
    Assignee: LeoLabs, Inc.
    Inventors: Matthew A. Stevenson, Michael Nicolls, Chris Rosner
  • Patent number: 11327168
    Abstract: A method of tracking objects using a radar, includes sending a beamcode to at least one radar antenna to set a predetermined direction, using samples from a random distribution of at least one of a phase or an amplitude to generate a tracking signal pulse train, transmitting the pulse train from the at least one antenna within a pulse time window, receiving return signals from objects at the at least one antenna, and using the return signals to gather data to track the objects. A radar system has at least one radar antenna to transmit a tracking signal, a memory to store a set of random distributions, a controller connected to at least one radar antenna and the memory, the controller to execute instructions to determine which random distribution to use, generate a pulse train using the random distribution, transmit the pulse train to the at least one radar antenna as the tracking signal, and gather measurement data about objects returning signals from the tracking signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 9, 2020
    Date of Patent: May 10, 2022
    Assignee: LeoLabs, Inc.
    Inventor: Michael Nicolls
  • Patent number: 10921427
    Abstract: A method of calibrating a phased-array radar includes receiving a signal at one of either a mobile platform or an antenna element of the phased-array radar, the transmission being sent as a transmitted signal from either the mobile platform or the antenna element, correlating the received signal to the transmitted signal to produce an initial phase delay for that antenna element, determining a difference between the initial phase delay and an expected phase delay, wherein the expected phase delay is based upon a relative position between the antenna element and the mobile platform, and saving the difference as a final phase delay for the antenna element. A system for calibrating a phased-array radar includes a phased-array radar having an array of antenna elements, and a mobile platform capable of flying over the phased-array.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 21, 2018
    Date of Patent: February 16, 2021
    Assignee: LeoLabs, Inc.
    Inventors: Michael Nicolls, John Buonocore
  • Publication number: 20200363523
    Abstract: A method of tracking objects using a radar, includes sending a beamcode to at least one radar antenna to set a predetermined direction, using samples from a random distribution of at least one of a phase or an amplitude to generate a tracking signal pulse train, transmitting the pulse train from the at least one antenna within a pulse time window, receiving return signals from objects at the at least one antenna, and using the return signals to gather data to track the objects. A radar system has at least one radar antenna to transmit a tracking signal, a memory to store a set of random distributions, a controller connected to at least one radar antenna and the memory, the controller to execute instructions to determine which random distribution to use, generate a pulse train using the random distribution, transmit the pulse train to the at least one radar antenna as the tracking signal, and gather measurement data about objects returning signals from the tracking signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 9, 2020
    Publication date: November 19, 2020
    Inventor: Michael Nicolls
  • Publication number: 20200278445
    Abstract: This disclosure enables various technologies for determining space object attitude stabilities from radar cross-section statistics. In particular, such determinations can be made via employing various phased-array radars with various fields of views, which can monitor various space objects (e.g., satellites, space debris, rocket bodies, space stations) over various periods of time (e.g., minutes, hours, days, weeks, months) as the space objects come into the fields of views. For example, a technique for estimating attitude stability of low-Earth RSOs using RCS statistics from various radars (e.g., group of radars, phased-array radar network). Assuming a non-isotropic shape, an Earth-oriented RSO can have an elevation-angle dependent RCS when viewed from a ground-based radar. Therefore, an RSO attitude stability can be tested by looking for a difference in a median or mean RCS when the RSO is viewed at different elevation angles.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 18, 2019
    Publication date: September 3, 2020
    Inventors: Matthew A. Stevenson, Michael Nicolls, Chris Rosner
  • Patent number: 10698099
    Abstract: A method of tracking objects using a radar, includes sending a beamcode to at least one radar antenna to set a predetermined direction, using samples from a random distribution of at least one of a phase or an amplitude to generate a tracking signal pulse train, transmitting the pulse train from the at least one antenna within a pulse time window, receiving return signals from objects at the at least one antenna, and using the return signals to gather data to track the objects. A radar system has at least one radar antenna to transmit a tracking signal, a memory to store a set of random distributions, a controller connected to at least one radar antenna and the memory, the controller to execute instructions to determine which random distribution to use, generate a pulse train using the random distribution, transmit the pulse train to the at least one radar antenna as the tracking signal, and gather measurement data about objects returning signals from the tracking signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 18, 2017
    Date of Patent: June 30, 2020
    Assignee: LeoLabs, Inc.
    Inventor: Michael Nicolls
  • Publication number: 20190257920
    Abstract: A method of calibrating a phased-array radar includes receiving a signal at one of either a mobile platform or an antenna element of the phased-array radar, the transmission being sent as a transmitted signal from either the mobile platform or the antenna element, correlating the received signal to the transmitted signal to produce an initial phase delay for that antenna element, determining a difference between the initial phase delay and an expected phase delay, wherein the expected phase delay is based upon a relative position between the antenna element and the mobile platform, and saving the difference as a final phase delay for the antenna element. A system for calibrating a phased-array radar includes a phased-array radar having an array of antenna elements, and a mobile platform capable of flying over the phased-array.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 21, 2018
    Publication date: August 22, 2019
    Inventors: Michael Nicolls, John Buonocore
  • Publication number: 20190113611
    Abstract: A method of tracking objects using a radar, includes sending a beamcode to at least one radar antenna to set a predetermined direction, using samples from a random distribution of at least one of a phase or an amplitude to generate a tracking signal pulse train, transmitting the pulse train from the at least one antenna within a pulse time window, receiving return signals from objects at the at least one antenna, and using the return signals to gather data to track the objects. A radar system has at least one radar antenna to transmit a tracking signal, a memory to store a set of random distributions, a controller connected to at least one radar antenna and the memory, the controller to execute instructions to determine which random distribution to use, generate a pulse train using the random distribution, transmit the pulse train to the at least one radar antenna as the tracking signal, and gather measurement data about objects returning signals from the tracking signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 18, 2017
    Publication date: April 18, 2019
    Inventor: MICHAEL NICOLLS