A study of toeplitz decorrelation techniques for direction of arrival estimation of coherent sources
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Date
2019
Authors
Shafuda, Frans Shiwovanhu
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Abstract
The Direction of Arrival (DOA) is one of the features of propagating waves that is
of interest in sensor array signal processing. Applications such as direction finding
and source location make use of DOA estimation. A number of DOA estimation
methods have been developed over time with special focus on achieving high resolution
performance. Subspace-based, also known as eigenstructure-based; methods
such as Multiple Signal Classification (MUSIC) and Estimation of Signal Parameters
via Rotational Invariance Techniques (ESPRIT) are amongst the excellent
and widely applied methods for DOA estimation. However, the performance of
these methods is highly degraded in the presence of coherent or highly correlated
incident sources caused by multipath propagation and electronic jamming. Conventional
techniques such as spatial smoothing have been introduced to better the
performance of these methods by removing correlation between coherent sources.
However, this is attained at the expense of reduced array aperture (degree of freedom)
and increased computational complexity. Of late, a variation of decorrelation
techniques based on Toeplitz matrix theory gained much interest in overcoming
the drawbacks of conventional decorrelation techniques. Based on a narrowband
signal propagation model and a Uniform Linear Array (ULA) in the presence
of white additive Gaussian noise, this study carried out an algebraic analysis of
two Toeplitz decorrelation techniques. These are, the correlation Toeplitz (CTOP)
and the average Toeplitz (AVTOP) decorrelation techniques. The techniques were
studied for DOA estimation of coherent sources in conjunction with the MUSIC
algorithm. The goal of the study is to provide an understanding of how and why
these techniques work. Through the algebraic analysis the study found that, DOA
information is perfectly preserved during decorrelation when retained as sums of
individual sources of information (i.e. in a superposition form). This explains why
the CTOP technique perfectly decorrelates coherent sources unlike the AVTOP
technique. This is because decorrelation based on the CTOP technique retains
superimposed sources’ DOA information. Based on the assumption that the exact
signal plus noise array covariance matrix is known, the MUSIC algorithm was applied
algebraically in order to validate the findings from the analysis. A maximum
of four array elements and three coherent narrowband sources were considered.
The algebra becomes intractable when the ULA elements are more than four.
The algebraic results have further shown that when the exact array covariance
matrix is known, the noise variance has no influence on DOA information and
DOA information can be accurately obtained using the MUSIC algorithm. Numerical
simulations were also conducted in order to confirm the superiority of the
CTOP decorrelation technique. Through numerical experiments, the performance
of these techniques was evaluated in terms of Root Mean Square Error, standard
deviation and probability of success in DOA estimation. The performance of the
classic MUSIC algorithm was also evaluated to serve as a baseline for comparison.
Regardless of the coherence among the sources, the CTOP MUSIC (CTOP technique
applied in conjunction with the MUSIC algorithm) returns more accurate
estimates even at low levels of SNR and minimum number of array sensors. The
study has been able to provide an understanding of the working principles behind
the two Toeplitz decorrelation techniques.
Description
A dissertation submitted in fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of Master of Science in Engineering
in the School of Electrical and Information Engineering
February, 2019
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Citation
Shafuda, Frans Shiwovanhu (2019) A study of Toeplitz decorrelation techniques for Direction of Arrival (DOA) estimation of coherent sources, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, <http://hdl.handle.net/10539/28222>