1,091 research outputs found

    Array processing based on time-frequency analysis and higher-order statistics

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Signal Processing and Propagation for Aeroacoustic Sensor Networking,” Ch

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    Passive sensing of acoustic sources is attractive in many respects, including the relatively low signal bandwidth of sound waves, the loudness of most sources of interest, and the inherent difficulty of disguising or concealing emitted acoustic signals. The availability of inexpensive, low-power sensing and signal-processing hardware enables application of sophisticated real-time signal processing. Among th

    The influence of random element displacement on DOA estimates obtained with (Khatri-Rao-)root-MUSIC

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    Although a wide range of direction of arrival (DOA) estimation algorithms has been described for a diverse range of array configurations, no specific stochastic analysis framework has been established to assess the probability density function of the error on DOA estimates due to random errors in the array geometry. Therefore, we propose a stochastic collocation method that relies on a generalized polynomial chaos expansion to connect the statistical distribution of random position errors to the resulting distribution of the DOA estimates. We apply this technique to the conventional root-MUSIC and the Khatri-Rao-root-MUSIC methods. According to Monte-Carlo simulations, this novel approach yields a speedup by a factor of more than 100 in terms of CPU-time for a one-dimensional case and by a factor of 56 for a two-dimensional case

    Signal Subspace Processing in the Beam Space of a True Time Delay Beamformer Bank

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    A number of techniques for Radio Frequency (RF) source location for wide bandwidth signals have been described that utilize coherent signal subspace processing, but often suffer from limitations such as the requirement for preliminary source location estimation, the need to apply the technique iteratively, computational expense or others. This dissertation examines a method that performs subspace processing of the data from a bank of true time delay beamformers. The spatial diversity of the beamformer bank alleviates the need for a preliminary estimate while simultaneously reducing the dimensionality of subsequent signal subspace processing resulting in computational efficiency. The pointing direction of the true time delay beams is independent of frequency, which results in a mapping from element space to beam space that is wide bandwidth in nature. This dissertation reviews previous methods, introduces the present method, presents simulation results that demonstrate the assertions, discusses an analysis of performance in relation to the Cramer-Rao Lower Bound (CRLB) with various levels of noise in the system, and discusses computational efficiency. One limitation of the method is that in practice it may be appropriate for systems that can tolerate a limited field of view. The application of Electronic Intelligence is one such application. This application is discussed as one that is appropriate for a method exhibiting high resolution of very wide bandwidth closely spaced sources and often does not require a wide field of view. In relation to system applications, this dissertation also discusses practical employment of the novel method in terms of antenna elements, arrays, platforms, engagement geometries, and other parameters. The true time delay beam space method is shown through modeling and simulation to be capable of resolving closely spaced very wideband sources over a relevant field of view in a single algorithmic pass, requiring no course preliminary estimation, and exhibiting low computational expense superior to many previous wideband coherent integration techniques

    Signal Subspace Processing in the Beam Space of a True Time Delay Beamformer Bank

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    A number of techniques for Radio Frequency (RF) source location for wide bandwidth signals have been described that utilize coherent signal subspace processing, but often suffer from limitations such as the requirement for preliminary source location estimation, the need to apply the technique iteratively, computational expense or others. This dissertation examines a method that performs subspace processing of the data from a bank of true time delay beamformers. The spatial diversity of the beamformer bank alleviates the need for a preliminary estimate while simultaneously reducing the dimensionality of subsequent signal subspace processing resulting in computational efficiency. The pointing direction of the true time delay beams is independent of frequency, which results in a mapping from element space to beam space that is wide bandwidth in nature. This dissertation reviews previous methods, introduces the present method, presents simulation results that demonstrate the assertions, discusses an analysis of performance in relation to the Cramer-Rao Lower Bound (CRLB) with various levels of noise in the system, and discusses computational efficiency. One limitation of the method is that in practice it may be appropriate for systems that can tolerate a limited field of view. The application of Electronic Intelligence is one such application. This application is discussed as one that is appropriate for a method exhibiting high resolution of very wide bandwidth closely spaced sources and often does not require a wide field of view. In relation to system applications, this dissertation also discusses practical employment of the novel method in terms of antenna elements, arrays, platforms, engagement geometries, and other parameters. The true time delay beam space method is shown through modeling and simulation to be capable of resolving closely spaced very wideband sources over a relevant field of view in a single algorithmic pass, requiring no course preliminary estimation, and exhibiting low computational expense superior to many previous wideband coherent integration techniques

    An antenna array processing system for multiple source bearing estimation

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    The principal topic of this dissertation is the application of array signal processing to angle-of-arrival (AOA) estimation of multiple plane waves. Assuming that a passive linear array of uniformly spaced sensors is used to measure the radiation field, a digital signal processing system is proposed which determines the number of narrowband sources and their respective bearings;The proposed direction-finding system integrates several algorithms in a cohesive arrangement to exploit their mutually similar structures. The Modified forward-backward linear prediction (MFBLP) spectral analysis method of Tufts and Kumaresan is used to obtain high spatial resolution, and the eigenanalysis which is central to its operation provides an excellent point of entry for a procedure to estimate the number of plane waves detected by the array. This procedure utilizes the AIC or MDL information theoretic criteria in an ensemble manner to generate a reliable estimate of the rank of the signal subspace of the deterministic correlation matrix of the array snapshot;Two algorithms are presented for determining the spatial frequencies of the incoming plane waves, based on the MFBLP method: one uses an iterative version of Newton\u27s method to locate the spectral peaks, and the other uses an iterative method to locate the equivalent complex poles;Statistical processing of the bearing estimates from a number of array snapshots is then used to maintain accuracy and precision in noisy array environment; two different estimators are proposed for this ensemble averaging, and their performance is characterized when applied to a single-source scenario. This utilizes both analytical and Monte Carlo computer simulation. The distributions are characterized in both wavenumber and bearing domains. Expressions for the bearing CRLB, expected standard deviation, and bearing estimate confidence interval are developed, believed to be the first known formulations of overall DF system performance as a function of array spacing, number of elements, true source bearing, and sensor signal-to-noise ratio. The statistical precision is shown to be related to the effective aperture of the antenna array, revealing the degradation in performance as the angle-of-arrival approaches endfire
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