Publication | Closed Access
A noise insensitive solution to an ambiguity problem in spectral estimation
20
Citations
2
References
1989
Year
Spectral TheoryWireless CommunicationsEngineeringMeasurementSpectrum EstimationCongruence ProblemInterference CancellationLocalizationSignal IntegrityStatistical Signal ProcessingClock RecoveryUncertainty QuantificationEstimation TheoryInstantaneous Frequency MeasurementChannel EqualizationComputer EngineeringInverse ProblemsSignal ProcessingHigh-frequency MeasurementSignal SeparationNoise Insensitive SolutionSpectral AnalysisAmbiguity ProblemSpectral EstimationSimultaneous Congruence Problem
The instantaneous frequency measurement (IFM) receiver is capable of measuring the center frequency of single frequency pulses over a wide range (bandwidth) of center frequencies. Because of various constraints, the frequency resolution requirement results in long correlator delay times that reduce the single correlator bandwidth. A large bandwidth can be achieved only if two or more correlators are used. The problem of estimating frequency is then reduced to the simultaneous congruence problem of number theory. A design procedure is presented for solving the congruence problem for a given amount of noise protection, a stated frequency resolution, a minimum bandwidth, and a fixed level of precision (bits) in the IFM receiver.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
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