LGJun 21, 2023
Resilient Sparse Array Radar with the Aid of Deep LearningAya Mostafa Ahmed, Udaya S. K. P. Miriya Thanthrige, Aydin Sezgin et al.
In this paper, we address the problem of direction of arrival (DOA) estimation for multiple targets in the presence of sensor failures in a sparse array. Generally, sparse arrays are known with very high-resolution capabilities, where N physical sensors can resolve up to $\mathcal{O}(N^2)$ uncorrelated sources. However, among the many configurations introduced in the literature, the arrays that provide the largest hole-free co-array are the most susceptible to sensor failures. We propose here two machine learning (ML) methods to mitigate the effect of sensor failures and maintain the DOA estimation performance and resolution. The first method enhances the conventional spatial smoothing using deep neural network (DNN), while the second one is an end-to-end data-driven method. Numerical results show that both approaches can significantly improve the performance of MRA with two failed sensors. The data-driven method can maintain the performance of the array with no failures at high signal-tonoise ratio (SNR). Moreover, both approaches can even perform better than the original array at low SNR thanks to the denoising effect of the proposed DNN
SPMay 10, 2020
A Reinforcement Learning based approach for Multi-target Detection in Massive MIMO radarAya Mostafa Ahmed, Alaa Alameer Ahmad, Stefano Fortunati et al.
This paper considers the problem of multi-target detection for massive multiple input multiple output (MMIMO) cognitive radar (CR). The concept of CR is based on the perception-action cycle that senses and intelligently adapts to the dynamic environment in order to optimally satisfy a specific mission. However, this usually requires a priori knowledge of the environmental model, which is not available in most cases. We propose a reinforcement learning (RL) based algorithm for cognitive multi-target detection in the presence of unknown disturbance statistics. The radar acts as an agent that continuously senses the unknown environment (i.e., targets and disturbance) and consequently optimizes transmitted waveforms in order to maximize the probability of detection ($P_\mathsf{D}$) by focusing the energy in specific range-angle cells (i.e., beamforming). Furthermore, we propose a solution to the beamforming optimization problem with less complexity than the existing methods. Numerical simulations are performed to assess the performance of the proposed RL-based algorithm in both stationary and dynamic environments. The RL based beamforming is compared to the conventional omnidirectional approach with equal power allocation and to adaptive beamforming with no RL. As highlighted by the proposed numerical results, our RL-based beamformer outperforms both approaches in terms of target detection performance. The performance improvement is even particularly remarkable under environmentally harsh conditions such as low SNR, heavy-tailed disturbance and rapidly changing scenarios.