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Mismatched Filtering of Sonar Signals
Journal article

Mismatched Filtering of Sonar Signals

Abstract

A replica correlator (matched filter) is an optimum processor for a receiver employing a pulse of continuous wave (CW) signal in a white Gaussian noise background. In an active sonar, however, when the target of interest has low Doppler shift and is embedded in a high reverberation background, this is not so. High sidelobes of the correlator frequency response pass a significant portion of the signal contained in the mainlobe of the reverberation spectrum. In order to reduce the sidelobes of the correlator output spectrum and at the same time keep the increase in its 3 dB bandwidth to a small amount, we propose lengthening of the replica of the transmitted signal and weighting it by a Kaiser window. It is demonstrated that by extending the weighted replica by 50 percent compared with the transmitted signal, it is possible to reduce the sidelobe levels to at least 40 dB below the mainlobe peak, with the concomitant increase of the 3 dB band-width by less than 5 percent. The degradation in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) performance for such a "mismatched" filter receiver with respect to the matched filter is less than 1.5 dB.

Authors

Kesler SB; Haykin S

Journal

IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems, Vol. AES-17, No. 5, pp. 730–734

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

Publication Date

January 1, 1981

DOI

10.1109/taes.1981.309112

ISSN

0018-9251

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