Kendall's advanced theory of statistics
Kendall's advanced theory of statistics
An introduction to signal detection and estimation (2nd ed.)
An introduction to signal detection and estimation (2nd ed.)
Radar Array Processing
Principles of Signal Detection and Parameter Estimation
Principles of Signal Detection and Parameter Estimation
Target localization accuracy gain in MIMO radar-based systems
IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
Spatial diversity in radars-models and detection performance
IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing
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We consider multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) radar systems with widely spaced transmit and receive antennas. We treat the problem of detecting point targets when one or more target parameters of interest are unknown. We provide a composite hypothesis testing framework for jointly estimating such parameters along with detecting the target while only a finite number of signal samples are available. The test offered is optimal in a Neyman-Pearson-like sense such that it provides a Bayesian-optimal detection test, minimizes the average mean-square parameter estimation error subject to an upper bound constraint on the false-alarm probability, and requires a finite number of samples. While the test can be applied for concurrently detecting the target along with estimating any unknown parameter of interest, we consider the problem of detecting a target which lies in an unknown space range and find the range through estimating the vector of time delays that the emitted waveforms undergo from being illuminated to the target until being observed by the receive antennas. We also analyze the diversity gain which we define as the rate that the probability of mis-detecting a target decays with the increasing SNR and show that for a MIMO radar system with Nt and Nr transmit and receive antennas, respectively, the diversity gain is 1 for point targets.