307 research outputs found
Joint Design of Overlaid Communication Systems and Pulsed Radars
The focus of this paper is on co-existence between a communication system and
a pulsed radar sharing the same bandwidth. Based on the fact that the
interference generated by the radar onto the communication receiver is
intermittent and depends on the density of scattering objects (such as, e.g.,
targets), we first show that the communication system is equivalent to a set of
independent parallel channels, whereby pre-coding on each channel can be
introduced as a new degree of freedom. We introduce a new figure of merit,
named the {\em compound rate}, which is a convex combination of rates with and
without interference, to be optimized under constraints concerning the
signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (including {\em signal-dependent}
interference due to clutter) experienced by the radar and obviously the powers
emitted by the two systems: the degrees of freedom are the radar waveform and
the afore-mentioned encoding matrix for the communication symbols. We provide
closed-form solutions for the optimum transmit policies for both systems under
two basic models for the scattering produced by the radar onto the
communication receiver, and account for possible correlation of the
signal-independent fraction of the interference impinging on the radar. We also
discuss the region of the achievable communication rates with and without
interference. A thorough performance assessment shows the potentials and the
limitations of the proposed co-existing architecture
Adaptive Interference Removal for Un-coordinated Radar/Communication Co-existence
Most existing approaches to co-existing communication/radar systems assume
that the radar and communication systems are coordinated, i.e., they share
information, such as relative position, transmitted waveforms and channel
state. In this paper, we consider an un-coordinated scenario where a
communication receiver is to operate in the presence of a number of radars, of
which only a sub-set may be active, which poses the problem of estimating the
active waveforms and the relevant parameters thereof, so as to cancel them
prior to demodulation. Two algorithms are proposed for such a joint waveform
estimation/data demodulation problem, both exploiting sparsity of a proper
representation of the interference and of the vector containing the errors of
the data block, so as to implement an iterative joint interference removal/data
demodulation process. The former algorithm is based on classical on-grid
compressed sensing (CS), while the latter forces an atomic norm (AN)
constraint: in both cases the radar parameters and the communication
demodulation errors can be estimated by solving a convex problem. We also
propose a way to improve the efficiency of the AN-based algorithm. The
performance of these algorithms are demonstrated through extensive simulations,
taking into account a variety of conditions concerning both the interferers and
the respective channel states
Performance of Radar and Communication Networks Coexisting in Shared Spectrum Bands
Recent technological advancements are making the use of compact, low-cost,
low-power mm-wave radars viable for providing environmental awareness in a
number of applications, ranging from automotive to indoor mapping and radio
resource optimisation. These emerging use-cases pave the road towards networks
in which a large number of radar and broadband communications devices coexist,
sharing a common spectrum band in a possibly uncoordinated fashion. Although a
clear understanding of how mutual interference influences radar and
communications performance is key to proper system design, the core tradeoffs
that arise in such scenarios are still largely unexplored. In this paper, we
provide results that help bridge this gap, obtained by means of an analytical
model and extensive simulations. To capture the fundamental interactions
between the two systems, we study mm-wave networks where pulsed radars coexist
with communications devices that access the channel following an ALOHA policy.
We investigate the effect of key parameters on the performance of the
coexisting systems, including the network density, fraction of radar and
communication nodes in the network, antenna directivity, and packet length. We
quantify the effect of mutual interference in the coexistence scenario on radar
detection and communication network throughput, highlighting some non-trivial
interplays and deriving useful design tradeoffs
Joint Design of surveillance radar and MIMO communication in cluttered environments
In this study, we consider a spectrum sharing architecture, wherein a
multiple-input multiple-output communication system cooperatively coexists with
a surveillance radar. The degrees of freedom for system design are the transmit
powers of both systems, the receive linear filters used for pulse compression
and interference mitigation at the radar receiver, and the space-time
communication codebook. The design criterion is the maximization of the mutual
information between the input and output symbols of the communication system,
subject to constraints aimed at safeguarding the radar performance. Unlike
previous studies, we do not require any time-synchronization between the two
systems, and we guarantee the radar performance on all of the range-azimuth
cells of the patrolled region under signal-dependent (endogenous) and
signal-independent (exogenous) interference. This leads to a non-convex
problem, and an approximate solution is thus introduced using a block
coordinate ascent method. A thorough analysis is provided to show the merits of
the proposed approach and emphasize the inherent tradeoff among the achievable
mutual information, the density of scatterers in the environment, and the
number of protected radar cells.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transaction on Signal Processing on June 24, 201
Co-existence Between a Radar System and a Massive MIMO Wireless Cellular System
In this paper we consider the uplink of a massive MIMO communication system
using 5G New Radio-compliant multiple access, which is to co-exist with a radar
system using the same frequency band. We propose a system model taking into
account the reverberation (clutter) produced by the radar system at the massive
MIMO receiver. Then, we propose several linear receivers for uplink
data-detection, ranging by the simple channel-matched beamformer to the
zero-forcing and linear minimum mean square error receivers for clutter
disturbance rejection. Our results show that the clutter may have a strong
effect on the performance of the cellular communication system, but the use of
large-scale antenna arrays at the base station is key to provide increased
robustness against it, at least as far as data-detection is concerned.Comment: To be presented at 2018 IEEE SPAWC, Kalamata, Greece, June 201
RadChat: Spectrum Sharing for Automotive Radar Interference Mitigation
In the automotive sector, both radars and wireless communication are susceptible to interference. However, combining the radar and communication systems, i.e., radio frequency (RF) communications and sensing convergence, has the potential to mitigate interference in both systems. This article analyses the mutual interference of spectrally coexistent frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) radar and communication systems in terms of occurrence probability and impact, and introduces RadChat, a distributed networking protocol for mitigation of interference among FMCW based automotive radars, including self-interference, using radar and communication cooperation. The results show that RadChat can significantly reduce radar mutual interference in single-hop vehicular networks in less than 80 ms
Phased-array laser radar: Concept and application
The design and construction of a coaxial transmitter-receiver combination was investigated. Major emphasis was placed on simple permanent optical alignment, transmitter-receiver field of view matching, use of a pulsed gas laser as a transmitter maximum optical efficiency, complete digital control of data acquisition, and optical mount pointing and tracking. Also a means of expanding the coaxial transmitter-receiver concept to allow phased-array lidar, par-lidar was described
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