DocumentCode
623702
Title
When target motion matters: Doppler coverage in radar sensor networks
Author
Xiaowen Gong ; Junshan Zhang ; Cochran, Douglas
Author_Institution
Sch. of Electr., Comput., & Energy Eng., Arizona State Univ., Tempe, AZ, USA
fYear
2013
fDate
14-19 April 2013
Firstpage
1169
Lastpage
1177
Abstract
Radar sensors, which actively transmit radio waves and collect RF energy scattered by objects in the environment, offer a number of advantages over purely passive sensors. An important issue in radar is that the transmitted energy may be scattered by objects that are not of interest as well as objects of interest (e.g., targets). The detection performance of radar systems is affected by such clutter as well as noise. Further, in many applications, clutter can be substantially stronger than the signals of interest. To combat the effect of clutter, a popular method is to take advantage of the Doppler frequency shift (DFS) extracted from the echo signal due to the relative motion of a target with respect to the radar. Unfortunately, a sensor coverage model that only depends on the distance to a target would fail to capture the DFS. In this paper, we set forth the concept of Doppler coverage for a network of spatially distributed radars. Specifically, a target is said to be Doppler-covered if, regardless of its direction of motion, there exists some radar in the network whose signalto-noise ratio (SNR) is sufficiently high and the DFS at that radar is sufficiently large. Based on the Doppler coverage model, we first propose an efficient method to characterize Dopplercovered regions for arbitrarily deployed radars. Then we design an algorithm for deriving the minimum radar density required to achieve Doppler coverage in a region under any polygonal deployment pattern, and further apply it to investigate the regular triangle based deployment.
Keywords
Doppler radar; Doppler shift; radar signal processing; radiowaves; Doppler frequency shift; Doppler sensor coverage model; RF energy; SNR; echo signal; passive sensor; polygonal deployment pattern; radar density; radar sensor network; radar system; radio waves; signal to noise ratio; target motion; triangle based deployment; Clutter; Doppler effect; Doppler radar; Radar detection; Sensors; Silicon; Doppler effect; critical sensor density; deterministic deployment; radar sensor network;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
INFOCOM, 2013 Proceedings IEEE
Conference_Location
Turin
ISSN
0743-166X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-5944-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/INFCOM.2013.6566908
Filename
6566908
Link To Document