Author_Institution :
Lincoln Lab., MIT, Lexington, MA, USA
Abstract :
Presents a case study of the design of a computationally intensive system to do adaptive nulling of interfering signals for a phased-array radar with many antenna elements. The goal of the design was to increase the computational horsepower available for this problem by about three orders of magnitude under the tight constraints of size, weight and power which are typical of an orbiting satellite. By combining the CORDIC rotation algorithm, systolic array concepts, Givens transformations, and restructurable VLSI, we built a system as small as a package of cigarettes, but capable of the equivalent of almost three billion operations per second. Our work was motivated by the severe limitations of size, weight and power which apply to computation aboard a spacecraft, although the same factors impose costs which are worth reducing in other circumstances. For an array of N antennas, the cost of the adaptive nulling computation grows as N3, so simply using more resources when N is large is not practical. The architecture developed, called MUSE (matrix update systolic experiment) determines the nulling weights for N=64 antenna elements in a sidelobe cancelling configuration. After explaining the antenna nulling system, we discuss another DSP computation that might benefit from similar architecture, technology, or algorithms: the solution of Toeplitz linear equations
Keywords :
CMOS digital integrated circuits; Toeplitz matrices; VLSI; adaptive signal processing; antenna phased arrays; digital signal processing chips; interference suppression; phased array radar; pipeline arithmetic; radar antennas; radar computing; radar interference; radar signal processing; radiofrequency interference; space vehicle electronics; systolic arrays; CORDIC rotation algorithm; Givens transformations; MUSE; Toeplitz linear equations; VLSI systolic arrays; adaptive nulling; antenna elements; array; interfering signals; matrix update systolic experiment; nulling weights; orbiting satellite; phased-array radar; restructurable VLSI; sidelobe cancelling configuration; Adaptive arrays; Adaptive systems; Computer architecture; Costs; Radar antennas; Satellites; Signal design; Spaceborne radar; Systolic arrays; Very large scale integration;