The present invention relates to a surface wave radar system and a method for processing data of a surface wave radar receiver.
Surface wave radar systems, in particular high frequency surface wave radar (HFSWR) systems, have recently been developed to overcome the line-of-sight limitation of microwave radar systems. HFSWR exploits a phenomenon known as a Norton wave propagation whereby a vertically polarised electromagnetic signal propagates efficiently as a surface wave along a conducting surface. HFSWR systems operate from coastal installations, with the ocean providing the conducting surface. The transmitted signal follows the curved ocean surface, and a system can detect objects beyond the visible horizon, with a range of the order of 200 km.
The successful detection of a target by a surface wave radar system traditionally involves compromises between a number of factors, including propagation losses, target radar cross-section, ambient noise, man-made interference, and signal-related clutter. It is desired to provide an improved surface wave radar system and data processing method, or at least a useful alternative to existing surface wave radar systems and methods.
In accordance with the present invention there is provided a surface wave radar system including:
The present invention also provides a surface wave radar system having a two-dimensional receive antenna array.
The present invention also provides a method for processing range and Doppler processed data in a surface wave radar receiver, including, for each range, the steps of:
The present invention also provides a data processing system for processing received surface wave radar data to mitigate ionospheric clutter.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention are hereinafter described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
A surface wave radar system, as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
A standard, prior art process for analysing surface wave radar data, as shown in
The data of
To determine the characteristics of ionospheric clutter, range-Doppler ionospheric clutter windows 80 were defined, as shown in
In order to mitigate the effects of ionospheric clutter, an adaptive process 300, as shown in
The adaptive process 300 begins at step 302, when antenna signals are received and digitised by the multi-channel digital receiver 40. The resulting digital signals are sent to the range & Doppler processing system 46 where they undergo conventional range 62 and Doppler 66 processing. The resulting range-Doppler processed data is a 32-variate complex vector Yjl:
where j is the range bin number, l is the Doppler bin number, and T denotes transposition.
This range-Doppler processed data is used by both branches 311, 313 of the adaptive process 300. The conventional processing branch 311 is executed first, as follows. The range-Doppler processed data is first sent via the network hub 58 to the conventional beamforming system 48 where conventional beamforming 64 is performed. The resulting data is sent to the envelope detection/normalisation/peak detection system 50, where envelope detection 68 is first performed. The envelope detection 68 generates cell power estimates for each range-Doppler-azimuth resolution cell using the cell amplitudes. An ionospheric clutter power estimate is generated for each cell by averaging the cell power estimates for a specified number of adjacent Doppler cells with the same range and azimuth by using a specified window that can be considered to slide across the Doppler cells. The Doppler cells occupied by dominant sea clutter are identified on the basis of the transmit frequency and the characteristic Bragg lines and are excluded from this averaging process. Normalisation 70 is then performed to generate a background noise power estimate by averaging the cell powers across all Doppler cells within all “negative” ranges 82, with reference to
Peak detection 72 is then performed to generate data identifying probable target cells. A cell is identified as a probable target cell if its cell power estimate exceeds its ionospheric clutter (or noise in the absence of clutter) power estimate by a threshold value. This data is sent to the primary target fusion & tracking system 54 and the adaptive processing system 52. This completes the conventional processing branch 311 of the adaptive process 300, and the steps of the adaptive processing branch 313 are then executed.
The clutter power estimates and the data identifying probable target cells are used by the adaptive processing system 52 to define training data Ω at step 316. The training data Ω is defined by selecting data from the range and Doppler processed data Yjl generated at step 306. Due to the variable properties of the ionospheric clutter, the training data Ω may include cells with operational ranges that always include strong sea clutter. However, because the ionospheric clutter is typically only a few dB above the noise floor, very effective sea-clutter resolution is required in order to obtain uncontaminated sea-clutter-free samples for successful training. For this reason, Doppler processing is performed prior to adaptive spatial filtering, and the training data Ω only includes Doppler cells occupied by ionospheric clutter, i.e. the training data Ω is selected by including cells that have a ionospheric clutter power estimate exceeding a noise power threshold value, but excluding cells containing probable targets or sea clutter. Probable target cells are excluded from the training data Ω because otherwise target data can be suppressed by the adaptive processing. At step 318, the training data Ω is used to generate an adaptive antenna response or filter Wmj(θ) for each range j, according to:
where m is an adjustable parameter with a default value of 3, as described below, α is a loading factor, as described below, I32 is a 32×32 diagonal unity matrix, H denotes Hermitian conjugation, i.e., complex conjugation and transposition, and S(θ) is the steering vector that corresponds to the (calibrated) antenna geometry and steering (i.e., beam) direction θ.
The first term within square parentheses in equation (2), the product αI32, is referred to as a loading matrix, and its inclusion makes the adaptive process robust and improves its convergence properties, as described in Y. I. Abramovich, A controlled method for optimisation of filters using the criterion of maximum SNR, Radio Eng. Electron. Phys. 26(3), 1981, pp 87–95. The loading factor α is selected to be at least 2 dB greater than the background noise power estimate generated by the normalisation step 70 of the conventional processing branch 311. The second term within square parentheses, Σk=jj+mΣlεΩYklYklH, is referred to as the sample matrix, and together, the terms within square parentheses constitute a loaded sample matrix. The adaptive filter generation step 318, defined by equation (2), is a form of loaded sample matrix inversion.
For the thirty-two doublet vertically polarised broadside calibrated antenna array 20, the steering vector S(θ) is determined in the standard manner:
where d is interdoublet spacing, equal to 15 m; λ is the operational wavelength of the transmitted signal; and θ is the beam direction, calculated relative to boresight.
To reduce the processing load on the adaptive filtering system 52, the adaptive filter generation step 318 determines adaptive filters Wmj(θ) that can be shared by a number of consecutive ranges, as indicated by the parameter m, with a default value of m=3.
However, the best performance is obtained when a unique filter is generated for every range bin, i.e., with m=1.
Having generated the adaptive filter at step 318, the adaptive filtering system 52 performs adaptive filtering 320 on the range and Doppler processed data Yjl, using the adaptive filter Wmj(θ) to generate adaptive beamformed output data Zjl(θ), as follows:
The adaptive filtering 320 is an adaptive beamforming process, similar to conventional beamforming 64. The adaptive filtered data is sent to the envelope detection/normalisation/peak detection system 50 for envelope detection 68, normalisation 70, and peak detection 72. The resulting data is sent to the primary target fusion & tracking system 54.
The two branches 311, 313 of the adaptive process 300 join at step 328, executed by the primary target fusion/tracking system 54, where the relatively strong primary targets identified by conventional processing at step 314 and the primary targets revealed by adaptive processing at step 326 are used to identify both strong and weak targets. Target tracking is performed at step 330 to determine the final output data 332. This output data 332 can be displayed and analysed by the display console 56.
Adaptive antenna pattern analysis indicates that the number of beams sufficient for a conventional beamformer is generally not sufficient for the adaptive filter described above. For this reason, a significantly greater number of beams (e.g., 64) are used in order not to lose a target with an unfavorable azimuth (with respect to steering directions).
More quantitative examples of ionospheric clutter mitigation in Doppler data are shown in
The adaptive process 300 also provides mitigation of interference from other sources. For example, in cases where external noise is present, significant external noise power reduction can also be achieved as a result of adaptive processing, as shown in
Overall, it was found that weak targets deeply immersed in ionospheric clutter can be reliably detected by the adaptive process 300, despite losses that are correlated with the target strength. In order to reduce target signal degradation and/or to increase the dynamic range of successfully detected targets, the calibration accuracy is maintained as high as possible. In radar systems where the transmitter is located in the back (reduced) lobe of a receiving array doublet, an active repeater (e.g., on oil rigs) is preferably deployed. Strong targets identified by conventional processing at step 314 can be used for adaptive antenna calibration.
The embodiment described above relates to data collected using the broadside antenna array 20 of thirty-two dipoles only. In an alternative embodiment, the receiver 14 includes a second, endfire array 22 of vertically polarised antenna elements 35. The endfire array 22 is oriented perpendicular and adjacent to the broad side array 20 to form a two-dimensional (2-D) antenna array, as shown in
The 2-D antenna array allowed 2-D adaptive clutter mitigation to be performed for various antenna configurations. The data processing system 24 allows individual antenna elements of the broadside array 20 and the endfire array 22 to be selectively switched for input to the digital receiver 40 to adjust the receive site antenna configuration. This allows the endfire array 22 to be excluded, and different 2-D configurations, such L and T shaped configurations, to be employed. For example, sixteen broadside dipoles (BD) and sixteen endfire monopoles (EM) can be combined to form a 16BD+16EM configuration. As described above, the number of independent antennas was limited to thirty-two by the number of data channels available in the digital receiver 40. However, it will be apparent that an alternative or additional digital receiver 40 can be used in order to provide more data channels and therefore allow more antenna elements to be used.
The 2-D adaptive processing was found to be superior to 1-D adaptive processing for ionospheric clutter mitigation. Although 1-D adaptive processing is generally quite effective, both the estimated clutter suppression and the signal-to-interference ratio for particular targets are significantly improved by 2-D processing, often revealing hidden targets, as shown in
Overall, the most advantageous 2-D configurations are L-shaped or T-shaped antenna array configurations without a significant gap (e.g., the gap should be some tens of metres or less) between broad-side and end-fire arms and within the arms; 16BD+16EM is preferred, but 22BD+10EM (or ED) was found to be the second best. Depending on the severity of ionospheric clutter contamination, the improvement in ionospheric clutter (per range) power resulting from using a 2-D receiver, as opposed to a 1-D receiver, was between 5–25 dB for ship mode, and 2–15 dB for air mode.
For adaptive beamforming, and specifically for adaptive beamforming that involves an L-shaped antenna array, traditional (beam-maximum) techniques for target azimuth estimation can be inaccurate due to significant pattern deformation. Azimuth estimation techniques that take into account antenna pattern deformation are preferably used to provide a more accurate value for the target azimuth, as described in R. C. Davis, L. E. Brennan and I. S. Reed, Angle Estimation with Adaptive Arrays in External Noise Fields, IEEE Trans. Aero. Elect. Sys. 12 (2), (1976), pp 176–186.
Many modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present invention as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PR8811/01 | Nov 2001 | AU | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3705407 | Wickersham | Dec 1972 | A |
6246365 | Tokoro | Jun 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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658410 | Nov 1992 | AU |
2013784 | May 1994 | RU |
2160452 | Dec 2000 | RU |
WO 9221041 | Nov 1992 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030142011 A1 | Jul 2003 | US |