Title :
Uni-vector-sensor ESPRIT for multisource azimuth, elevation, and polarization estimation
Author :
Wong, Kainam T. ; Zoltowski, Michael D.
Author_Institution :
Appl. Phys. Lab., Johns Hopkins Univ., Laurel, MD, USA
fDate :
10/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper introduces a novel eigenstructure-based algorithm uni-vector-sensor ESPRIT that yields closed-form direction-of-arrival (DOA) estimates and polarization estimates using one electromagnetic vector sensor. A vector sensor is composed of six spatially co-located nonisotropic polarization-sensitive antennas, measuring all six electromagnetic field components of the incident wave field. Uni-vector-sensor ESPRIT is based on a matrix-pencil pair of temporally displaced data sets collected from a single electromagnetic vector sensor. The closed-form parameter estimates are obtained through a vector cross-product operation on each decoupled signal-subspace eigenvector of the data correlation matrix. This method exploits the electromagnetic sources´ polarization diversity in addition to their spatial diversity, requires no a priori knowledge of signal frequencies, suffers no frequency-DOA ambiguity, pairs automatically the x-axis direction cosines with the y-axis direction cosines, eliminates array interelement calibration, can resolve up to five completely polarized uncorrelated monochromatic sources from near field or far field. It impressively out-performs an array of spatially displaced identically polarized antennas of comparable array-manifold size and computational load
Keywords :
antenna arrays; array signal processing; correlation methods; direction-of-arrival estimation; eigenvalues and eigenfunctions; electromagnetic fields; electromagnetic wave polarisation; matrix algebra; array manifold size; closed form DOA estimates; closed form parameter estimates; data correlation matrix; decoupled signal subspace eigenvector; direction of arrival estimates; eigenstructure based algorithm; electromagnetic field components measurement; electromagnetic sources; electromagnetic vector sensor; elevation estimation; far field; incident wave field; matrix-pencil pair; multisource azimuth estimation; near field; nonisotropic polarization sensitive antennas; polarization diversity; polarization estimates; polarization estimation; polarized uncorrelated monochromatic sources; spatial diversity; temporally displaced data sets; univector sensor ESPRIT; vector cross-product; Antenna accessories; Antenna arrays; Antenna measurements; Azimuth; Direction of arrival estimation; Electromagnetic fields; Electromagnetic measurements; Electromagnetic wave polarization; Frequency diversity; Yield estimation;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on