The constant information radar, or CIR, is a tracking radar that modulates target revisit time by maintaining a fixed mutual information measure. For highly dynamic targets that deviate significantly from the path predicted by the tracking motion model, the CIR adjusts by illuminating the target more frequently than it would for well-modeled targets. If SNR is low, the radar delays revisit to the target until the state entropy overcomes noise uncertainty. As a result, we show that the information measure is highly dependent on target entropy and target measurement covariance. A constant information measure maintains a fixed spectral efficiency to support the RF convergence of radar and communications. The result is a radar implementing a novel target scheduling algorithm based on information instead of heuristic or ad hoc methods. The CIR mathematically ensures that spectral use is justified.
Details
- The Constant Information Radar
- Paul, Bryan (Author)
- Bliss, Daniel (Author)
- Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering (Contributor)
- Digital object identifier: 10.3390/e18090338
- Identifier TypeInternational standard serial numberIdentifier Value1424-8220
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Paul, B., & Bliss, D. (2016). The Constant Information Radar. Entropy, 18(9), 338. doi:10.3390/e18090338