Radio frequency interference (RFI) has become an increasing and challenging problem in microwave interferometric radiometry (MIR). Accurate localization of RFI sources is helpful to provide location information for switching off… Click to show full abstract
Radio frequency interference (RFI) has become an increasing and challenging problem in microwave interferometric radiometry (MIR). Accurate localization of RFI sources is helpful to provide location information for switching off unauthorized transmitters causing RFI and mitigating the impact of these RFI sources. In this article, we propose a new RFI localization method based on reweighted nuclear norm minimization (RNNM). This method exploits the low-rank property of augmented covariance matrix (ACM) collecting visibility samples in MIR and introduces a singular value weighting strategy to consider different contributions of ACM components. First, ACM is constructed from the original covariance matrix of sparse array, which increases the degree of freedom (DOF) for array processing and hence improves the angular resolution performance. Second, we present a fixed point iteration (FPI)-based RNNM Algorithm, named FRA, to achieve low-rank approximation of ACM involving contribution degrees of ACM components. In this way, the ACM components corresponding to RFI signals are retained well and ones corresponding to background noises are suppressed. Third, we use a subspace-based direction-of-arrival (DOA) estimation approach, i.e., MUSIC algorithm, on the weighted completed ACM (WCACM) (obtained by FRA in the second stage) to locate the potential RFI sources. Retrieved results using synthetic data and real soil moisture and ocean salinity (SMOS) satellite data demonstrate that the proposed RNNM-based method not only has the superiority on improved detection performance, especially for identifying weak sources, but also shows better or competitive localization accuracy and angular resolution, compared with the existing commonly used RFI localization methods in MIR.
               
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