Doppler filtering and detection strategies for multifunction radar.
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This thesis concerns the analysis and processing of sea clutter from a Multiband Pulsed Radar -
a land based research system operated by the British Defence Evaluation and Research Agency.
This radar serves as a model for a class of Multi Function Radars (MFR) that offer extensive
computer controlled adaptive operation.
A fast Sequential Edge Detector (SED) is formulated which, accounting for locally exponential
speckle, allows the spatial inhomogeneity within a scene to be segmented. This simultaneously
identifies high intensity areas and the noise dominated shadowed regions of the scene using an
adaptively sized analysis window. The high resolution data is thus shown to contain discrete
scatterers which exist in addition to the compound modulation from the wave surface.
The discrete component means the measured statistics cannot be considered homogenous or stationary.
This is crucial for high resolution MFR as a priori information can no longer be relied
upon when viewing a scene for the first time in order to make a detection decision.
Considering the returns to be discrete in nature leads to a potential Doppler detection scheme operable
at low velocities within the clutter spectrum. A physically motivated test statistic, termed
persistence, is demonstrated based upon the lifetime of scattering events determined via the Continuous
Wavelet Transform.
When operated in coastal regions at low resolution, strong returns from the land-sea interface
(edges) are expected which will seriously degrade the performance of radar detection models
tuned to homogenous scenes. Explicit operational bounds are determined for the strength of these
edges which show that simultaneous operation of an edge detector is required when assessing
compound statistics such as the K-distribution using typical texture estimators.
Additionally a method for accurately determining the N-sum PDF of K-distributed statistics within
noise is constructed using a numerical inverse Laplace transform. The SED is also applied to
Synthetic Aperture Sonar data to detect the large shadows cast by targets rather than their point
intensity.