In this work we study the unique problems associated with resolving the direction of arrival (DOA) of coherent signals separated by less than an antenna beamwidth when the data are collected in the beamspace domain with, for example, electronically or holographically scanned antennas. We also propose a technique that is able to resolve these coherent signals. The technique is based on interpolation of the data measured by an element-space virtual array. Although the data are collected in the beamspace domain, the coherence structure can be broken by interpolating multiple shifted element-space virtual arrays. The efficacy of this technique depends on a fundamental tradeoff that arises due to a nonuniform signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) profile across the elements of the virtual array. This profile is due to the structure imposed by the specific beam pattern of the antenna. In addition to describing our technique and studying the SNR profile tradeoff, we also incorporate a strategy for improving performance through a subswath technique that improves covergence of covariance estimates.
We describe a novel method to track targets in a large field of view. This method simultaneously images multiple, encoded sub-fields of view onto a common focal plane. Sub-field encoding enables target tracking by creating a unique connection between target characteristics in superposition space and the target’s true position in real space. This is accomplished without reconstructing a conventional image of the large field of view. Potential encoding schemes include spatial shift, rotation, and magnification. We discuss each of these encoding schemes, but the main emphasis of the paper and all examples are based on one-dimensional spatial shift encoding. System performance is evaluated in terms of two criteria: average decoding time and probability of decoding error. We study these performance criteria as a function of resolution in the encoding scheme and signal-to-noise ratio. Finally, we include simulation and experimental results demonstrating our novel tracking method