DocumentCode
61323
Title
Snapshot Performance of the Dominant Mode Rejection Beamformer
Author
Wage, Kathleen E. ; Buck, John R.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., George Mason Univ., Fairfax, VA, USA
Volume
39
Issue
2
fYear
2014
fDate
Apr-14
Firstpage
212
Lastpage
225
Abstract
The dominant mode rejection (DMR) beamformer constructs its weight vector using a structured covariance estimate derived from the eigendecomposition of the sample covariance matrix (SCM). Like all adaptive beamformers (ABFs), the DMR ABF places notches in the direction of loud interferers to facilitate the detection of quiet targets. This paper investigates how DMR performs as a function of the number of snapshots used to estimate the SCM. The analysis focuses on the fundamental case of a single interferer in white noise. Theoretical calculations for the ensemble case reveal the relationships among notch depth, white noise gain, and SINR. The centerpiece of the paper is a detailed empirical study of the single-interferer case, which includes snapshot-deficient scenarios often ignored in previous work. Empirical data demonstrate that the sample eigenvectors determine the mean performance of the DMR ABF. On a log-log plot the mean notch depth is a piecewise linear function of the number of snapshots and the interference-to-noise ratio. The paper interprets the behavior of the DMR ABF using recent results on sample eigenvectors derived from random matrix theory.
Keywords
adaptive signal detection; adaptive signal processing; array signal processing; covariance matrices; eigenvalues and eigenfunctions; sonar signal processing; white noise; DMR ABF; DMR beamformer; SCM; adaptive beamformers; dominant mode rejection beamformer; eigendecomposition; eigenvectors; interference-to-noise ratio; loud interferers; mean notch depth; notch depth; passive sonar array processing; piecewise linear function; random matrix theory; sample covariance matrix; single-interferer case; snapshot performance; snapshot-deficient scenario; structured covariance estimate; target detection; weight vector; white noise gain; Adaptive beamformer (ABF); dominant mode rejection (DMR); eigendecomposition; random matrix theory (RMT); sample covariance matrix (SCM);
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0364-9059
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JOE.2013.2251538
Filename
6516096
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