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On information resolution of radar systems

journal contribution
posted on 2022-11-30, 05:06 authored by Y Cheng, X Wang, Terry CaelliTerry Caelli, X Li, B Moran
In target detection and tracking, the resolvability of multiple closely spaced targets of the sensor measurement is an important criterion for measuring the sensing ability of sensor systems like radar and sonar. The concept of information resolution for a sensor measurement system, which is defined in the framework of information geometry, is introduced. In particular, the information resolution of radar/sonar systems is generalised from the work on existing radar resolution pioneered by Woodward, et al. [1, 2] and defined on statistical manifolds where the intrinsic geometrical structure of both waveform, measurement, and noise models of the underlying sensing devices are conveniently characterized in terms of the Fisher information metric. This work is motivated by the fact that existing radar resolution identifies the ambiguities of the underlying waveforms regardless of the influence of noise but the latter often has significant contributions to outcomes such as target detection and tracking, radar imaging, etc. To this end, information resolution provides a unified statistical measure for the capability of sensing devices for a given application. Examples of basic radar measurements are presented to highlight the importance of information resolution for measurement systems in practical applications. © 2011 IEEE.

History

Journal

IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems

Volume

48

Pagination

3084 - 3102

ISSN

0018-9251

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal