DocumentCode
341730
Title
A novel closed-form azimuth/elevation angle and polarization estimation technique using only electric dipole triads or only magnetic loop triads with arbitrary unknown spacings
Author
Wong, Kainam Thomas
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electron. Eng., Chinese Univ. of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong
Volume
3
fYear
1999
fDate
36342
Firstpage
207
Abstract
This paper introduces a new closed-form ESPRIT-based algorithm for multi-source direction finding using only dipole triads or only magnetic loop triads, arbitrarily spaced at possibly unknown locations. A dipole (loop) triad consists of three identical co-located but orthogonally oriented electrically short dipoles (magnetically small loops), separately measuring all three Cartesian components of the incident electric (magnetic) field. ESPRIT exploits the polarizational but nonspatial inter-relations among the three unknown electric-field (magnetic-field) components of each source. By solving a set of nonlinear equations relating different entities in the electric-field (or magnetic-field) vector´s ambiguous estimate, the signal´s arrival angles and polarization states may be unambiguously estimated. Monte Carlo simulation results verify the efficacy and versatility of this scheme. This method, using only dipole triads or only loop triads, represents a simplification of Li´s and Wong and Zoltowski´s earlier and related direction finding schemes requiring both the six-component electromagnetic vector-sensor, each of which must consist of a dipole triad plus a co-located loop triad
Keywords
Monte Carlo methods; dipole antenna arrays; direction-of-arrival estimation; electromagnetic wave polarisation; Cartesian components; ESPRIT-based algorithm; Monte Carlo simulation results; arbitrary unknown spacings; arrival angles; closed-form azimuth/elevation angle; electric dipole triads; magnetic loop triads; multi-source direction finding; nonlinear equations; nonspatial inter-relations; orthogonally oriented electrically short dipoles; polarization estimation technique; polarization states; six-component electromagnetic vector-sensor; Azimuth; Dipole antennas; Direction of arrival estimation; Directive antennas; Electromagnetic wave polarization; Magnetic separation; Maximum likelihood estimation; Multiple signal classification; Nonlinear equations; Yield estimation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Circuits and Systems, 1999. ISCAS '99. Proceedings of the 1999 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Orlando, FL
Print_ISBN
0-7803-5471-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISCAS.1999.778821
Filename
778821
Link To Document