Title :
Toeplitz Compressed Sensing Matrices With Applications to Sparse Channel Estimation
Author :
Haupt, Jarvis ; Bajwa, Waheed U. ; Raz, Gil ; Nowak, Robert
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
Abstract :
Compressed sensing (CS) has recently emerged as a powerful signal acquisition paradigm. In essence, CS enables the recovery of high-dimensional sparse signals from relatively few linear observations in the form of projections onto a collection of test vectors. Existing results show that if the entries of the test vectors are independent realizations of certain zero-mean random variables, then with high probability the unknown signals can be recovered by solving a tractable convex optimization. This work extends CS theory to settings where the entries of the test vectors exhibit structured statistical dependencies. It follows that CS can be effectively utilized in linear, time-invariant system identification problems provided the impulse response of the system is (approximately or exactly) sparse. An immediate application is in wireless multipath channel estimation. It is shown here that time-domain probing of a multipath channel with a random binary sequence, along with utilization of CS reconstruction techniques, can provide significant improvements in estimation accuracy compared to traditional least-squares based linear channel estimation strategies. Abstract extensions of the main results are also discussed, where the theory of equitable graph coloring is employed to establish the utility of CS in settings where the test vectors exhibit more general statistical dependencies.
Keywords :
Toeplitz matrices; binary sequences; channel estimation; convex programming; graph colouring; least squares approximations; multipath channels; probability; random sequences; signal detection; sparse matrices; transient response; CS reconstruction techniques utilization; Toeplitz compressed sensing matrices; graph coloring; high dimensional sparse signal acquisition paradigm; impulse response; least squares based linear channel estimation strategy; random binary sequence; sparse channel estimation; structured statistical dependencies; time domain probing; time-invariant system identification problems; tractable convex optimization; wireless multipath channel estimation; zero mean random variables; Channel estimation; Estimation; Random variables; Sparse matrices; Training; Vectors; Wireless communication; Circulant matrices; Hankel matrices; Toeplitz matrices; compressed sensing; restricted isometry property; sparse channel estimation; wireless communications;
Journal_Title :
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIT.2010.2070191