Paper
23 May 2014 Analysis of the tolerance of compressive noise radar systems to multiplicative perturbations
Mahesh C. Shastry, Ram M. Narayanan, Muralidhar Rangaswamy
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Abstract
Compressive noise radar imaging involves the inversion of a linear system using l1-based sparsity constraints. This linear system is characterized by the circulant system matrix generated by the transmit waveform. The imaging problem is solved using convex optimization. The characterization of imaging performance in the presence of additive noise and other random perturbations remains an important open problem. Computational studies designed to be generalizable suggest that uncertainties related to multiplicative noise adversely affect detection performance. Multiplicative noise occurs when the recorded transmit waveform is an inaccurate version of the actual transmitted signal. The actual transmit signal leaving the antenna is treated as the signal. If the recorded version is considered as a noisy version of this signal, then, generalizable numerical experiments show that the signal to noise ratio of the recorded signal should be greater than about 35 dB for accurate signal recovery.
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Mahesh C. Shastry, Ram M. Narayanan, and Muralidhar Rangaswamy "Analysis of the tolerance of compressive noise radar systems to multiplicative perturbations", Proc. SPIE 9109, Compressive Sensing III, 910905 (23 May 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2053116
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Radar

Imaging systems

Radar imaging

Signal to noise ratio

Interference (communication)

Compressed sensing

Computing systems

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