High-order RM and DFM correction method for long-time coherent integration of highly maneuvering target

2019 ◽  
Vol 162 ◽  
pp. 221-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Fang ◽  
Rui Min ◽  
Zongjie Cao ◽  
Yiming Pi
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (17) ◽  
pp. 3367
Author(s):  
Jibin Zheng ◽  
Kangle Zhu ◽  
Zhiyong Niu ◽  
Hongwei Liu ◽  
Qing Huo Liu

The multivariate range function of the high-speed maneuvering target induces modulations on both the envelop and phase, i.e., the range cell migration (RCM) and Doppler frequency migration (DFM) which degrade the long-time coherent integration used for detection and localization. To solve this problem, many long-time coherent integration methods have been proposed. Based on mechanisms of typical methods, this paper names two signal processing modes, i.e., processing unification (PU) mode and processing separation (PS) mode, and presents their general forms. Thereafter, based on the principle of the PS mode, a novel long-time coherent integration method, known as the generalized dechirp-keystone transform (GDKT), is proposed for radar high-speed maneuvering target detection and localization. The computational cost, energy integration, peak-to-sidelobe level (PSL), resolution, and anti-noise performance of the GDKT are analyzed and compared with those of the maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) method and keystone transform-dechirp (KTD) method. With mathematical analyses and numerical simulations, we validate two main superiorities of the GDKT, including (1) the statistically optimal anti-noise performance, and (2) the low computational cost. The real radar data is also used to validate the GDKT. It is worthwhile noting that, based on closed analytical formulae of the MLE method, KTD method, and GDKT, several doubts in radar high-speed maneuvering target detection and localization are mathematically interpreted, such as the blind speed sidelobe (BSSL) and the relationship between the PU and PS modes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
pp. 3718-3731 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lanjin Lin ◽  
Guohao Sun ◽  
Ziyang Cheng ◽  
Zishu He

2013 ◽  
Vol 141 (10) ◽  
pp. 3435-3449 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Jia ◽  
Judith C. Hill ◽  
Katherine J. Evans ◽  
George I. Fann ◽  
Mark A. Taylor

Abstract Although significant gains have been made in achieving high-order spatial accuracy in global climate modeling, less attention has been given to the impact imposed by low-order temporal discretizations. For long-time simulations, the error accumulation can be significant, indicating a need for higher-order temporal accuracy. A spectral deferred correction (SDC) method is demonstrated of even order, with second- to eighth-order accuracy and A-stability for the temporal discretization of the shallow water equations within the spectral-element High-Order Methods Modeling Environment (HOMME). Because this method is stable and of high order, larger time-step sizes can be taken while still yielding accurate long-time simulations. The spectral deferred correction method has been tested on a suite of popular benchmark problems for the shallow water equations, and when compared to the explicit leapfrog, five-stage Runge–Kutta, and fully implicit (FI) second-order backward differentiation formula (BDF2) time-integration methods, it achieves higher accuracy for the same or larger time-step sizes. One of the benchmark problems, the linear advection of a Gaussian bell height anomaly, is extended to run for longer time periods to mimic climate-length simulations, and the leapfrog integration method exhibited visible degradation for climate length simulations whereas the second-order and higher methods did not. When integrated with higher-order SDC methods, a suite of shallow water test problems is able to replicate the test with better accuracy.


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