4.7 Article

Localization of Narrowband Radio Emitters Based on Doppler Frequency Shifts

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SIGNAL PROCESSING
Volume 56, Issue 11, Pages 5500-5508

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TSP.2008.929655

Keywords

Differential Doppler (DD); emitter location; maximum-likelihood estimation

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Several techniques for emitter localization based on the Doppler effect have been described in the literature. One example is the differential Doppler (DD) method in which the signal of it stationary emitter is intercepted by at least two moving receivers. The frequency difference between the receivers is measured at several locations along their trajectories and the emitter's position is then estimated based on these measurements. This two-step approach is suboptimal since each frequency difference measurement is performed independently, although all measurements correspond to it common emitter position. Instead, a single-step approach based on the maximum likelihood criterion is proposed here for both known and unknown waveforms. The position is determined directly front all the observations by a search in the position space. The method can only be used for narrowband signals, that is, tinder the assumption that the signal bandwidth must be small compared to the inverse of the propagation time between the receivers. Simulations show that the proposed method outperforms the DD method for weak signals while both methods converge to the Cramer-Rao bound for strong known signals. Finally, it is shown that in sonic cases of interest the proposed method inherently selects reliable observations while ignoring unreliable data.

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