Communications – electrical: acoustic wave systems and devices – Echo systems – Distance or direction finding
Patent
1984-07-20
1987-03-31
Tarcza, Thomas H.
Communications, electrical: acoustic wave systems and devices
Echo systems
Distance or direction finding
367 95, 367117, 367 93, G01S 968
Patent
active
046548351
ABSTRACT:
A bistatic sonar employing LMS adaptive spatial prediction is used to process against surface reverberation from the convergence zone (CZ). Hydrophones spatially separated from the primary array are used as references. The critical behavior exploited by the invention is that since the reverberation may be viewed as an extended source for the reverberation, the correlation drops off with separation between the reference and primary sensors, while it stays a constant for the plane wave target return. The reverberation is non-stationary, functionally dependent on the signal (even though the back scatter is statistically uncorrelated with the signal), and spatially extended over the sector of the CZ annulus cut out by the transmitter azimuth beamwidth. The detection of the target is based on the sudden appearance of one strong target point source within a densely packed region of weak point sources that have been constantly present and whose sum is much larger than the target. The use of more than a single reference leads to a minimal improvement in detection performance and may actually degrade performance due to increased algorithm noise. Detection performance tends to increase with increasing separation distance between the primary and the reference hydrophone. For signal, reverberation, and algorithm parameters consistent with modern active sonars operating in the CZ mode, the spatial prediction approach to detection of the plane wave signal will allow detection of targets not possible using conventional active processing, provided the reference hydrophone can be placed to give a correlation of less than 0.05. Such values may be obtained with very reasonable spacing between primary and reference, allowing the reference to be positioned, for example, along the hull aft of the primary array.
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Hughes Aircraft Company
Karambelas A. W.
Pihulic Daniel T.
Tarcza Thomas H.
Thompson Robert
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