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Covariance estimation with scanning arrays: FY23 RF Systems Technical Investment Program

Published in:
MIT Lincoln Laboratory Report TIP-194

Summary

Analog arrays with steerable beams can be capable of angle estimation and sometimes even adaptive beamforming based on power measurements taken at the outputs of multiple beam dwells. In the interesting case of a reflectarray, where beams are formed using a large collection of programmable, passive phase shifters, it is possible to use multiple dwells to estimate signal correlations among the phase shifters. These correlations form an estimated covariance matrix at the phase centers of the shifters. Adaptive beamforming and geolocation can be based on this covariance matrix. Various methods for estimating full-rank and approximately rank-deficient covariance matrices using power measurements from multiple dwells are introduced and evaluated. In some cases, the performance of an estimator can be shown to be optimal in the sense of achieving Cramer-Rao bounds for the estimated covariance parameters.
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Summary

Analog arrays with steerable beams can be capable of angle estimation and sometimes even adaptive beamforming based on power measurements taken at the outputs of multiple beam dwells. In the interesting case of a reflectarray, where beams are formed using a large collection of programmable, passive phase shifters, it is...

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Beamforming with distributed arrays: FY19 RF Systems Line-Supported Program

Published in:
MIT Lincoln Laboratory Report LSP-270

Summary

Spatial beamforming using distributed arrays of RF sensors is treated. Unlike the observations from traditional RF antenna arrays, the distributed array's data can be subjected to widely varying time and frequency shifts among sensors and signals. These shifts require compensation upon reception in order to perform spatial filtering. To perform beamforming with a distributed array, the complex-valued observations from the sensors are shifted in time and frequency, weighted, and summed to form a beamformer output that is designed to mitigate interference and enhance signal energy. The appropriate time-frequency shifts required for good beamforming are studied here using several different methodologies.
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Summary

Spatial beamforming using distributed arrays of RF sensors is treated. Unlike the observations from traditional RF antenna arrays, the distributed array's data can be subjected to widely varying time and frequency shifts among sensors and signals. These shifts require compensation upon reception in order to perform spatial filtering. To perform...

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Efficient reconstruction of block-sparse signals

Published in:
IEEE Statistical Signal Processing Workshop, 28-30 June 2011.

Summary

In many sparse reconstruction problems, M observations are used to estimate K components in an N dimensional basis, where N > M ¿ K. The exact basis vectors, however, are not known a priori and must be chosen from an M x N matrix. Such underdetermined problems can be solved using an l2 optimization with an l1 penalty on the sparsity of the solution. There are practical applications in which multiple measurements can be grouped together, so that K x P data must be estimated from M x P observations, where the l1 sparsity penalty is taken with respect to the vector formed using the l2 norms of the rows of the data matrix. In this paper we develop a computationally efficient block partitioned homotopy method for reconstructing K x P data from M x P observations using a grouped sparsity constraint, and compare its performance to other block reconstruction algorithms.
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Summary

In many sparse reconstruction problems, M observations are used to estimate K components in an N dimensional basis, where N > M ¿ K. The exact basis vectors, however, are not known a priori and must be chosen from an M x N matrix. Such underdetermined problems can be solved...

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A multi-sensor compressed sensing receiver: performance bounds and simulated results

Published in:
43rd Asilomar Conf. on Signals, Systems, and Computers, 1-4 November 2009, pp. 1571-1575.

Summary

Multi-sensor receivers are commonly tasked with detecting, demodulating and geolocating target emitters over very wide frequency bands. Compressed sensing can be applied to persistently monitor a wide bandwidth, given that the received signal can be represented using a small number of coefficients in some basis. In this paper we present a multi-sensor compressive sensing receiver that is capable of reconstructing frequency-sparse signals using block reconstruction techniques in a sensor-frequency basis. We derive performance bounds for time-difference and angle of arrival (AoA) estimation of such a receiver, and present simulated results in which we compare AoA reconstruction performance to the bounds derived.
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Summary

Multi-sensor receivers are commonly tasked with detecting, demodulating and geolocating target emitters over very wide frequency bands. Compressed sensing can be applied to persistently monitor a wide bandwidth, given that the received signal can be represented using a small number of coefficients in some basis. In this paper we present...

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Compressed sensing arrays for frequency-sparse signal detection and geolocation

Published in:
Proc. of the 2009 DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program Users Group Conf., HPCMP-UGC, 15 June 2009, pp. 297-301.

Summary

Compressed sensing (CS) can be used to monitor very wide bands when the received signals are sparse in some basis. We have developed a compressed sensing receiver architecture with the ability to detect, demodulate, and geolocate signals that are sparse in frequency. In this paper, we evaluate detection, reconstruction, and angle of arrival (AoA) estimation via Monte Carlo simulation and find that, using a linear 4- sensor array and undersampling by a factor of 8, we achieve near-perfect detection when the received signals occupy up to 5% of the bandwidth being monitored and have an SNR of 20 dB or higher. The signals in our band of interest include frequency-hopping signals detected due to consistent AoA. We compare CS array performance using sensor-frequency and space-frequency bases, and determine that using the sensor-frequency basis is more practical for monitoring wide bands. Though it requires that the received signals be sparse in frequency, the sensor-frequency basis still provides spatial information and is not affected by correlation between uncompressed basis vectors.
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Summary

Compressed sensing (CS) can be used to monitor very wide bands when the received signals are sparse in some basis. We have developed a compressed sensing receiver architecture with the ability to detect, demodulate, and geolocate signals that are sparse in frequency. In this paper, we evaluate detection, reconstruction, and...

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