Title :
Adaptive airborne MTI: comparison of sideways and forward looking radar
Author_Institution :
FGAN-FFM, Wachtberg, Germany
Abstract :
Clutter echoes received by a moving radar exhibit a motion induced Doppler bandwidth which degrades detection of slowly moving targets. This Doppler spread effect can be overcome by use of adaptive space-time clutter filters which implicitly compensate for the radar platform motion. To apply space-time processing a multi-channel antenna is required (spatial dimension of the space-time filter). In the existing literature on airborne MTI only the sidelooking case is considered. We focus on a forward looking antenna configuration. While sidelooking MTI is based on the DPCA property (physical motion compensation) this is not true for the forward looking antenna. Numerical calculations have shown that near-optimum clutter rejection can be achieved even for forward looking radar. Some basic considerations are made to explain the underlying principles of forward looking MTI. Optimum and suboptimum adaptive receiver structures are compared. An overall comparison of sidelooking and forward looking MTI is presented. It turns out that in general the forward looking configuration is more sensitive to interfering effects, such as system bandwidth, range ambiguities and jamming
Keywords :
Doppler effect; adaptive antenna arrays; adaptive filters; adaptive signal processing; airborne radar; array signal processing; filtering theory; interference suppression; jamming; motion compensation; phased array radar; radar clutter; radar receivers; radar signal processing; DPCA; Doppler spread effect; adaptive airborne MTI; adaptive space-time clutter filters; clutter echoes; clutter rejection; forward looking MTI; forward looking antenna; forward looking radar; interfering effects; jamming; motion induced Doppler bandwidth; multichannel antenna; optimum adaptive receiver structures; phased array radar; radar detection; radar platform motion compensation; range ambiguities; sideways looking radar; slowly moving target detection; space-time processing; suboptimum adaptive receiver structures; system bandwidth; Adaptive filters; Bandwidth; Degradation; Doppler radar; Motion compensation; Motion detection; Radar antennas; Radar clutter; Radar detection; Spaceborne radar;
Conference_Titel :
Radar Conference, 1995., Record of the IEEE 1995 International
Conference_Location :
Alexandria, VA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2121-9
DOI :
10.1109/RADAR.1995.522619