IET Radar, Sonar & Navigation (Aug 2022)

Passive radar downrange imaging with multiple transmitters and one receiver

  • Aaron Brandewie,
  • Robert J. Burkholder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1049/rsn2.12263
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 8
pp. 1316 – 1329

Abstract

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Abstract Passive radar systems use illuminators of opportunity to illuminate targets instead of dedicated radar transmitters. The signals of opportunity have lower bandwidth than dedicated active radar systems, leading to poor downrange resolution. Multiple signals of opportunity can be coherently combined to increase the overall bandwidth of the system, and therefore create finer resolution images. These signals are usually separated in the frequency domain (non‐contiguous), which causes large unwanted grating lobe artefacts in the image when using back‐projection or Fourier transform based imaging. Additionally, these signals may originate from transmitters not located at the same position. A calibration method is developed to align the downrange responses and coherently combine the two signals. A compressive sensing‐based algorithm is used to combine the calibrated non‐contiguous frequency data, and is shown to mitigate the grating lobe artefacts that occur when using a back‐projection algorithm. This approach is validated with simulated and experimental data from a passive radar system tracking a commercial airline using two digital television (DTV) broadcast transmitters.

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