Title :
Multicarrier radar signal - pulse train and CW
Author :
Levanon, Nadav ; Mozeson, Eli
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng.-Syst., Tel Aviv Univ., Israel
fDate :
4/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A multicarrier complementary phase-coded (MCPC) radar signal employs N subcarriers simultaneously. The subcarriers are phase modulated by N different sequences that constitute a complementary set. The subcarriers are frequency-separated by the inverse of the duration of a phase element tb. An N×M MCPC pulse achieves pulse compression ratio of NM. When an N×M MCPC signal is used in a coherent train of N pulses (e.g., in order to allow Doppler processing), it is advantageous to use pulse diversity. Each pulse is constructed using a different cyclic frequency shift of the first pulse. Such pulse diversity eliminates recurrent lobes at multiples of the pulse repetition interval. The constant volume property of the ambiguity function is maintained by shifting volume from the recurrent lobes to the sidelobe pedestal strips. However, if the sequence ordering along frequencies in the N pulses are arranged to create a complementary set in each frequency as well as in each pulse, the sidelobe level around the main autocorrelation lobe is dramatically reduced. Preferred MCPC coding for CW mode (contiguous MCPC pulses) and their delay-Doppler response are also discussed
Keywords :
CW radar; Doppler radar; Hadamard matrices; correlation methods; phase coding; pulse compression; radar signal processing; CW mode; Chebyshev weighting; Doppler processing; Doppler resolution; Hadamard matrices; ambiguity function; autocorrelation sidelobes; chirp rate diversity; complementary phase-coded radar signal; complex envelope; constant volume property; contiguous identical pulses; correlation response; delay-Doppler response; frequency weighting; jamming immunity; linear FM pulse train; multicarrier radar signal; phase modulated subcarriers; pulse compression ratio; pulse diversity; sequence ordering; Autocorrelation; Delay; Frequency diversity; OFDM; Phase modulation; Pulse compression methods; Radar; Signal processing; Signal resolution; Strips;
Journal_Title :
Aerospace and Electronic Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAES.2002.1009000