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Uncovering nonlinear dynamics-the case study of...
Journal article

Uncovering nonlinear dynamics-the case study of sea clutter

Abstract

Nonlinear dynamics are basic to the characterization of many physical phenomena encountered in practice. Typically, we are given a time series of some observable(s) and the requirement is to uncover the underlying dynamics responsible for generating the time series. This problem becomes particularly challenging when the process and measurement equations of the dynamics are both nonlinear and noisy. Such a problem is exemplified by the case study of sea clutter which refers to radar backscatter from an ocean surface. After setting the stage for this case study, the paper presents tutorial reviews of: (1) the classical models of sea clutter based on the compound K distribution and (2) the application of chaos theory to sea clutter. Experimental results are presented that cast doubts on chaos as a possible nonlinear dynamical mechanism for the generation of sea clutter. Most importantly, experimental results show that on timescales smaller than a few seconds, sea clutter is very well described as a complex autoregressive process of order four or five. On larger timescales, gravity or swell waves cause this process to be modulated in both amplitude and frequency. It is shown that the amount of frequency modulation is correlated with the nonlinearity of the clutter signal. The dynamical model is an important step forward from the classical statistical approaches, but it is in its early stages of development.

Authors

Haykin S; Bakker R; Currie BW

Journal

Proceedings of the IEEE, Vol. 90, No. 5, pp. 860–881

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

Publication Date

January 1, 2002

DOI

10.1109/jproc.2002.1015011

ISSN

0018-9219

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