We propose new compressive parameter estimation algorithms that make use of
polar interpolation to improve the estimator precision. Our work extends
previous approaches involving polar interpolation for compressive parameter
estimation in two aspects: (i) we extend the formulation from real non-negative
amplitude parameters to arbitrary complex ones, and (ii) we allow for mismatch
between the manifold described by the parameters and its polar approximation.
To quantify the improvements afforded by the proposed extensions, we evaluate
six algorithms for estimation of parameters in sparse translation-invariant
signals, exemplified with the time delay estimation problem. The evaluation is
based on three performance metrics: estimator precision, sampling rate and
computational complexity. We use compressive sensing with all the algorithms to
lower the necessary sampling rate and show that it is still possible to attain
good estimation precision and keep the computational complexity low. Our
numerical experiments show that the proposed algorithms outperform existing
approaches that either leverage polynomial interpolation or are based on a
conversion to a frequency-estimation problem followed by a super-resolution
algorithm. The algorithms studied here provide various tradeoffs between
computational complexity, estimation precision, and necessary sampling rate.
The work shows that compressive sensing for the class of sparse
translation-invariant signals allows for a decrease in sampling rate and that
the use of polar interpolation increases the estimation precision.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, to appear in IEEE Transactions on Signal
Processing; minor edits and correction