This paper studies adaptive radar detection of range distributed targets in the presence of Gaussian interference and possible diffuse multipath returns modeled as independent zero-mean complex circular Gaussian random vectors… Click to show full abstract
This paper studies adaptive radar detection of range distributed targets in the presence of Gaussian interference and possible diffuse multipath returns modeled as independent zero-mean complex circular Gaussian random vectors with unknown covariance matrices. For this problem, an adaptive constrained generalized likelihood ratio (ACGLR) test is devised, where in each range cell of the primary data the covariance matrix (due to both multipath and disturbance echoes) is forced to belong to a neighborhood of the secondary data sample covariance. The size of the uncertainty set is determined adaptively employing jointly a union-intersection test and an expectation likelihood (EL)-based estimate. Besides, an adaptive detector based on the complex parameter Rao test criterion is derived. Remarkably, both the two new architectures possess the desired constant false alarm rate (CFAR) property with respect to the disturbance covariance. Finally, their detection performance is assessed and validated via numerical examples.
               
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