Performance analysis of bearing-only target location algorithms

The performance of two well-known bearing-only location techniques, the maximum likelihood (ML) and the Stansfield estimators, is examined. Analytical expressions are obtained for the bias and the covariance matrix of the estimation error, which permit performance comparison for any case of interest. It is shown that the Stansfield algorithm provides biased estimates even for large numbers of measurements, in contrast with the ML method. The RMS error of the Stansfield technique is not necessarily larger than the RMS of the ML technique. However, it is shown that the ML technique is superior to the Stansfield method when the number of measurements is large enough. Simulation results verify the predicted theoretical performance. >

[1]  H. E. Daniels,et al.  The Theory of Position Finding , 1951 .

[2]  Clinton J. Ancker,et al.  Airborne Direction Finding---The Theory of Navigation Errors , 1958, IRE Transactions on Aeronautical and Navigational Electronics.

[3]  Statistical analysis of position fixing in three dimensions , 1969 .

[4]  D. C. Cooper Statistical analysis of position-fixing general theory for systems with gaussian errors , 1972 .

[5]  WADE FOY,et al.  Position-Location Solutions by Taylor-Series Estimation , 1976, IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems.

[6]  M. Wax Position Location from Sensors with Position Uncertainty , 1983, IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems.

[7]  Don Torrieri,et al.  Statistical Theory of Passive Location Systems , 1984, IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems.

[8]  K. Spingarn Passive Position Location Estimation Using the Extended Kalman Filter , 1987, IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems.

[9]  M. Gavish,et al.  Nth-order dynamics target observability from angle measurements , 1988 .

[10]  Benjamin Friedlander,et al.  Analysis of the asymptotic relative efficiency of the MUSIC algorithm , 1988, IEEE Trans. Acoust. Speech Signal Process..

[11]  M. Gavish,et al.  Effect of bias on bearing-only target location , 1990 .