50 research outputs found

    Multiple-input Multiple-output Radar Waveform Design Methodologies

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    Multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) radar is currently an active area of research. The MIMO techniques have been well studied for communications applications where they offer benefits in multipath fading environments. Partly inspired by these benefits, MIMO techniques are applied to radar and they offer a number of advantages such as improved resolution and sensitivity. It allows the use of transmitting multiple simultaneous waveforms from different phase centers. The employed radar waveform plays a key role in determining the accuracy, resolution, and ambiguity in performing tasks such as determining the target range, velocity, shape, and so on. The excellent performance promised by MIMO radar can be unleashed only by proper waveform design. In this article, a survey on MIMO radar waveform design is presented. The goal of this paper is to elucidate the key concepts of waveform design to encourage further research on this emerging technology.Defence Science Journal, 2013, 63(4), pp.393-401, DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.14429/dsj.63.253

    The Bi-directional Spatial Spectrum for MIMO Radar and Its Applications

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    <p>Radar systems have long applied electronically-steered phased arrays to discriminate returns in azimuth angle and elevation angle. On receiver arrays, beamforming is performed after reception of the data, allowing for many adaptive array processing algorithms to be employed. However, on transmitter arrays, up until recently pre-determined phase shifts had to applied to each transmitter element before transmission, precluding adaptive transmit array processing schemes. Recent advances in multiple-input multiple-output radar techniques have allowed for transmitter channels to separated after data reception, allowing for virtual non-causal "after-the-fact" transmit beamforming. The ability to discriminate in both direction-of-arrival and direction-of-departure allows for the novel ability to discriminate line-of-sight returns from multipath returns. This works extends the concept of virtual non-causal transmit beamforming to the broader concept of a bi-directional spatial spectrum, and describes application of such a spectrum to applications such as spread-Doppler multipath clutter mitigation in ground-vehicle radar, and calibration of a receiver array of a MIMO system with ground clutter only. Additionally, for this work, a low-power MIMO radar testbed was developed for lab testing of MIMO radar concepts.</p>Dissertatio

    Beamforming issues in modern MIMO Radars with Doppler

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    In traditional beamforming radar systems, the transmitting antennas send coherent waveforms which form a highly focused beam. In the MIMO radar system, the transmitter sends noncoherent (possibly orthogonal) broad (possibly omni-directional) waveforms. These waveforms can be extracted by a matched filterbank at the receiver. The extracted signals can be used to obtain more diversity or improve the clutter resolution. This paper focuses on space-time adaptive processing (STAP) for MlMO radar systems which improves the clutter resolution. The size of the MIMO STAP steering vector can be much larger than the traditional SIMO STAP steering vector because of the extra dimension. An accurate estimation of clutter rank for the subspace method is developed, and is a generalization of Brennan's rule to the MIMO radar case. A data independent method for estimating the clutter subspace is also described
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