Performance Degradation in a Quadrature Receiver for CW Signals Corrupted by Multipath.

Abstract

In active sonar applications, a quadrature receiver can be employed to detect the presence of an underwater reflector. This well-known receiver performs optimally when the input waveform is a coherent signal (i.e., constant but unknown amplitude and phase) embedded in white, zero-mean noise. Unfortunately, when an attempt is made to detect a distributed highlight reflector in a multipath environment by using a narrowband transmit signal, the various multipath returns may overlap, producing a non-resolvable multipath situation and causing the amplitude and phase of the signal to become random functions of time. Under these circumstances, the detection performance of the quadrature receiver is degraded compared to its performance with a coherent signal. This study theoretically measures the degradation in the receiver's output signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) when the input waveform consists of a narrowband Gaussian signal embedded in white noise. The output SNR's dependence on the correlation characteristics of the input signal is clearly shown. (Author)

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 02, 1980
Accession Number
ADA089679

Entities

People

  • R. C. Higgins

Organizations

  • Naval Underwater Systems Center

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Materials and Manufacturing Processes

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Acoustics
  • Active Sonar
  • Amplitude
  • Autocorrelation
  • Degradation
  • Detection
  • Detectors
  • Filters
  • Frequency
  • Integrals
  • Lepidoptera
  • Matched Filters
  • Narrowband
  • Noise
  • Reflectors
  • Sonar
  • Waveforms

Fields of Study

  • Engineering

Readers

  • Acoustical Oceanography.
  • Image Processing and Computer Vision.
  • Statistical inference.