65 research outputs found

    An enhanced particle filtering method for GMTI radar tracking

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    This paper investigates the problem of ground vehicle tracking with a Ground Moving Target Indicator (GMTI) radar. In practice, the movement of ground vehicles may involve several different manoeuvring types (acceleration, deceleration, standstill, etc.). Consequently, the GMTI radar may lose measurements when the radial velocity of the ground vehicle is below a threshold, i.e. falling into the Doppler blind region. In this paper, to incorporate the information gathered from normal measurements and knowledge on the Doppler blindness constraint, we develop an enhanced particle filtering method for which the importance distributions are inspired by a recent noise related doppler blind (NRDB) filtering algorithm for GMTI tracking. Specifically, when constructing the importance distributions, the proposed particle filter takes the advantages of the efficient NRDB algorithm by applying the extended Kalman filter and its generalization for interval-censored measurements. In addition, the linearization and Gaussian approximations in the NRDB algorithm are corrected by the weighting process of the developed filtering method to achieve a more accurate GMTI tracking performance. The simulation results show that the proposed method substantially outperforms the existing methods for the GMTI tracking problem

    An enhanced particle filtering method for GMTI radar tracking

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    This paper investigates the problem of ground vehicle tracking with a Ground Moving Target Indicator (GMTI) radar. In practice, the movement of ground vehicles may involve several different manoeuvring types (acceleration, deceleration, standstill, etc.). Consequently, the GMTI radar may lose measurements when the radial velocity of the ground vehicle is below a threshold, i.e. falling into the Doppler blind region. In this paper, to incorporate the information gathered from normal measurements and knowledge on the Doppler blindness constraint, we develop an enhanced particle filtering method for which the importance distributions are inspired by a recent noise related doppler blind (NRDB) filtering algorithm for GMTI tracking. Specifically, when constructing the importance distributions, the proposed particle filter takes the advantages of the efficient NRDB algorithm by applying the extended Kalman filter and its generalization for interval-censored measurements. In addition, the linearization and Gaussian approximations in the NRDB algorithm are corrected by the weighting process of the developed filtering method to achieve a more accurate GMTI tracking performance. The simulation results show that the proposed method substantially outperforms the existing methods for the GMTI tracking problem

    A New Gaussian Mixture Algorithm for GMTI Tracking Under a Minimum Detectable Velocity Constraint

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    A new Gaussian mixture method with exactly exploiting the negative information for GMTI radar tracking in a low-observable environment

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    This paper investigates the problem of ground vehicle tracking with a Ground Moving Target Indicator (GMTI) radar. In practice, the movement of ground vehicles may involve several different manoeuvring types (acceleration, deceleration, standstill, etc.). Consequently, the GMTI radar may lose measurements when the radial velocity of the ground vehicle is below a threshold when it stops, i.e. falling into the Doppler blind region. Besides, there will be false alarms in low-observable environments where there exist high noises interferences. In this paper, we develop a novel algorithm for the GMTI tracking in a low-observable environment with false alarms while exactly incorporating the ‘negative information’ (i.e., the target is likely to stop when no measurements are recorded) based on the Bayesian inference framework. For the Bayesian inference implementation, the Gaussian mixture approximation method is adopted to approximate related distributions, while different filtering algorithms (including both extended Kalman filter and its generalization for interval-censored measurements) are applied for updating the Gaussian mixture components. Target state estimation can be directly obtained through the Gaussian mixture model for the GMTI tracking at every time instance. We have compared the developed method with other state-of-the-art ones and the simulation results show that the proposed method substantially outperforms the existing methods for the GMTI tracking problem

    Impairments in ground moving target indicator (GMTI) radar

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    Radars on multiple distributed airborne or ground based moving platforms are of increasing interest, since they can be deployed in close proximity to the event under investigation and thus offer remarkable sensing opportunities. Ground moving target indicator (GMTI) detects and localizes moving targets in the presence of ground clutter and other interference sources. Space-time adaptive processing (STAP) implemented with antenna arrays has been a classical approach to clutter cancellation in airborne radar. One of the challenges with STAP is that the minimum detectable velocity (MDV) of targets is a function of the baseline of the antenna array: the larger the baseline (i.e., the narrower the beam), the lower the MDV. Unfortunately, increasing the baseline of a uniform linear array (ULA) entails a commensurate increase in the number of elements. An alternative approach to increasing the resolution of a radar, is to use a large, but sparse, random array. The proliferation of relatively inexpensive autonomous sensing vehicles, such as unmanned airborne systems, raises the question whether is it possible to carry out GMTI by distributed airborne platforms. A major obstacle to implementing distributed GMTI is the synchronization of autonomous moving sensors. For range processing, GMTI processing relies on synchronized sampling of the signals received at the array, while STAP processing requires time, frequency and phase synchronization for beamforming and interference cancellation. Distributed sensors have independent oscillators, which are naturally not synchronized and are each subject to different stochastic phase drift. Each sensor has its own local oscillator, unlike a traditional array in which all sensors are connected to the same local oscillator. Even when tuned to the same frequency, phase errors between the sensors will develop over time, due to phase instabilities. These phase errors affect a distributed STAP system. In this dissertation, a distributed STAP application in which sensors are moving autonomously is envisioned. The problems of tracking, detection for our proposed architecture are of important. The first part focuses on developing a direct tracking approach to multiple targets by distributed radar sensors. A challenging scenario of a distributed multi-input multi-output (MIMO) radar system (as shown above), in which relatively simple moving sensors send observations to a fusion center where most of the baseband processing is performed, is presented. The sensors are assumed to maintain time synchronization, but are not phase synchronized. The conventional approach to localization by distributed sensors is to estimate intermediate parameters from the received signals, for example time delay or the angle of arrival. Subsequently, these parameters are used to deduce the location and velocity of the target(s). These classical localization techniques are referred to as indirect localization. Recently, new techniques have been developed capable of estimating target location directly from signal measurements, without an intermediate estimation step. The objective is to develop a direct tracking algorithm for multiple moving targets. It is aimed to develop a direct tracking algorithm of targets state parameters using widely distributed moving sensors for multiple moving targets. Potential candidate for the tracker include Extended Kalman Filter. In the second part of the dissertation,the effect of phase noise on space-time adaptive processing in general, and spatial processing in particular is studied. A power law model is assumed for the phase noise. It is shown that a composite model with several terms is required to properly model the phase noise. It is further shown that the phase noise has almost linear trajectories. The effect of phase noise on spatial processing is analyzed. Simulation results illustrate the effect of phase noise on degrading the performance in terms of beam pattern and receiver operating characteristics. A STAP application, in which spatial processing is performed (together with Doppler processing) over a coherent processing interval, is envisioned

    Overview of contextual tracking approaches in information fusion

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    Proceedings of: Geospatial InfoFusion III. 2-3 May 2013 Baltimore, Maryland, United States.Many information fusion solutions work well in the intended scenarios; but the applications, supporting data, and capabilities change over varying contexts. One example is weather data for electro-optical target trackers of which standards have evolved over decades. The operating conditions of: technology changes, sensor/target variations, and the contextual environment can inhibit performance if not included in the initial systems design. In this paper, we seek to define and categorize different types of contextual information. We describe five contextual information categories that support target tracking: (1) domain knowledge from a user to aid the information fusion process through selection, cueing, and analysis, (2) environment-to-hardware processing for sensor management, (3) known distribution of entities for situation/threat assessment, (4) historical traffic behavior for situation awareness patterns of life (POL), and (5) road information for target tracking and identification. Appropriate characterization and representation of contextual information is needed for future high-level information fusion systems design to take advantage of the large data content available for a priori knowledge target tracking algorithm construction, implementation, and application.Publicad

    The University Defence Research Collaboration In Signal Processing

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    This chapter describes the development of algorithms for automatic detection of anomalies from multi-dimensional, undersampled and incomplete datasets. The challenge in this work is to identify and classify behaviours as normal or abnormal, safe or threatening, from an irregular and often heterogeneous sensor network. Many defence and civilian applications can be modelled as complex networks of interconnected nodes with unknown or uncertain spatio-temporal relations. The behavior of such heterogeneous networks can exhibit dynamic properties, reflecting evolution in both network structure (new nodes appearing and existing nodes disappearing), as well as inter-node relations. The UDRC work has addressed not only the detection of anomalies, but also the identification of their nature and their statistical characteristics. Normal patterns and changes in behavior have been incorporated to provide an acceptable balance between true positive rate, false positive rate, performance and computational cost. Data quality measures have been used to ensure the models of normality are not corrupted by unreliable and ambiguous data. The context for the activity of each node in complex networks offers an even more efficient anomaly detection mechanism. This has allowed the development of efficient approaches which not only detect anomalies but which also go on to classify their behaviour

    An information theoretic approach to processing management

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