
Estimating Location Accuracy of Stationary Emitter in Presence of Biasing in Receiver Position and Velocity by Exploiting Cross Ambiguity Function
Author(s) -
Anupam Sharma,
Suman Agrawal,
Charul Bhatnagar,
D. S. Chauhan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international journal of engineering and advanced technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2249-8958
DOI - 10.35940/ijeat.c4738.029320
Subject(s) - fdoa , multilateration , geolocation , common emitter , ambiguity function , kinematics , position (finance) , biasing , computer science , algorithm , geodesy , mathematics , acoustics , physics , telecommunications , electronic engineering , geology , engineering , voltage , electrical engineering , radar , finance , classical mechanics , waveform , world wide web , node (physics) , economics
This paper proposes CAF algorithm to estimate localisation accuracy of a stationary emitter which is being monitored by a pair of sensors mounted on high altitudes. It computes joint Time Difference of Arrival (TDOA) and Frequency Difference of Arrival (FDOA) using Cross Ambiguity Function (CAF) and measures geolocation accuracy in presence of biasing in sensor position and velocity. Previous work in this area utilizes TDOA and FDOA measurements with known sensor kinematics which is fed to Maximum Likelihood or Least Squares algorithm for post processing. However it is computation demanding. In the present work, surface peaks of TDOA and FDOA values are directly mapped to geographic coordinates. This method is computationally efficient. As sensor and emitter geometry keeps changing over time due to moving sensors, multiple CAF snapshots are taken for emitter geolocation. Simulations are carried out using MATLAB. It is observed that at 30 dB SNR, location accuracy of stationary emitter is 100 m at known sensor kinematics and by introducing bias in the receiver position and velocity, it is 200 meters. These measurements are well within and in accordance with theoretical developments.