Title :
Reduced-Complexity Maximum Likelihood Direction-of-Arrival Estimation Based on Spatial Aliasing
Author :
Jong-Woo Shin ; Young-Jun Lee ; Hyoung-Nam Kim
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. Eng., Pusan Nat. Univ., Busan, South Korea
Abstract :
Spatial aliasing is an undesirable phenomenon that prevents the unique determination of the direction of arrival (DOA) of impinging signals in array signal processing. However, the characteristics of spatial aliasing that generates ambiguous DOAs can be also used to reduce the computational complexity in maximum-likelihood (ML) DOA estimation. This paper proposes a structural method to dramatically reduce the computational complexity of the ML DOA estimation using the spatial aliasing generated by a nested array structure with a doubly scaled aperture. An ML full grid search is computationally simplified by the highly compressed searching range and the small number of candidate values to be searched which are derived based on spatial aliasing. Performance analyses based on the theoretical bounds and computational complexity with computer simulations show that the proposed method requires an extremely reduced computational load compared to the conventional ML DOA estimation with a uniform linear array (ULA) while achieving the performance enhancement in the estimation accuracy due to the enlarged array aperture.
Keywords :
array signal processing; computational complexity; direction-of-arrival estimation; maximum likelihood estimation; array aperture; computational complexity reduction; direction-of-arrival estimation; doubly scaled aperture; highly compressed searching range; reduced complexity maximum likelihood estimation; spatial aliasing; uniform linear array; Antenna arrays; Apertures; Arrays; Direction-of-arrival estimation; Maximum likelihood estimation; Array signal processing; direction of arrival estimation; maximum likelihood estimation; nested array; spatial aliasing;
Journal_Title :
Signal Processing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TSP.2014.2367454