Title :
Graceful degradation of an adaptive beamforming processor
Author :
Heiligman, G.M. ; Purdy, R.J.
Author_Institution :
Sterling Federal Syst., Moffett Field, CA, USA
fDate :
1/1/1992 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The phase and amplitude weights of each element in an adaptive, digitally beamformed array antenna can be calculated by a systolic parallel processor. The authors propose that the entire weight calculation (both QR decomposition, previously discussed by W.M. Gentleman and H.T. Kung (1981), and the back-substitutions, which are presented for the first time) be performed in a triangular array of processors. This has the highly desirable property of graceful degradation: the loss of one or more component processors does not cause the computed weights to degrade catastrophically. The loss of a processor in the systolic array merely reduces the number of available degrees of freedom. Moreover, the processing array does not need to be globally reconfigured; the functions of all the remaining processors are unaffected and their interconnections are undisturbed. The authors describe the processing flow in the systolic array, show how its degradation is inherently graceful, and present a realistic example of graceful degradation
Keywords :
antenna phased arrays; computerised signal processing; systolic arrays; adaptive beamforming processor; amplitude weights; back-substitutions; computerised signal processing; digitally beamformed array antenna; graceful degradation; parallel architecture; phase weights; systolic parallel processor; triangular array of processors; Adaptive arrays; Antenna arrays; Array signal processing; Covariance matrix; Degradation; Equations; Interference; Phased arrays; Systolic arrays; Voltage;
Journal_Title :
Aerospace and Electronic Systems, IEEE Transactions on