Publication | Closed Access
Robust Adaptive Beamformers Based on Worst-Case Optimization and Constraints on Magnitude Response
98
Citations
38
References
2009
Year
Array ProcessingAdaptive FilterAdaptive BeamformerRobust Adaptive BeamformersEngineeringSensor ArrayWorst-case OptimizationArray Magnitude ResponseAdaptive ModulationComputer EngineeringAdaptive Beamformer RobustSystems EngineeringSmart AntennaSensor ArraysAdaptive AlgorithmBeamformingSignal ProcessingMagnitude Response
Arrays suffer from numerous imperfections beyond steering errors. The paper proposes robust adaptive beamformers with magnitude response constraints. The authors reformulate beamformer design as a linear programming problem via autocorrelation transformation and employ worst‑case optimization to cast robustness as a second‑order cone program. The proposed beamformers achieve flexible control of response region, superior robustness to array imperfections, and significant SINR improvement, demonstrating practical viability.
In this paper, novel robust adaptive beamformers are proposed with constraints on array magnitude response. With the transformation from the array output power and the magnitude response to linear functions of the autocorrelation sequence of the array weight, the optimization of an adaptive beamformer, which is often described as a quadratic optimization problem in conventional beamforming methods, is then reformulated as a linear programming (LP) problem. Unlike conventional robust beamformers, the proposed method is able to flexibly control the robust response region with specified beamwidth and response ripple. In practice, an array has many imperfections besides steering direction error. In order to make the adaptive beamformer robust against all kinds of imperfections, worst-case optimization is exploited to reconstruct the robust beamformer. By minimizing array output power with the existence of the worst-case array imperfections, the robust beamforming can be expressed as a second-order cone programming (SOCP) problem. The resultant beamformer possesses superior robustness against arbitrary array imperfections. With the proposed methods, a large robust response region and a high signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) enhancement can be achieved readily. Simple implementation, flexible performance control, as well as significant SINR enhancement, support the practicability of the proposed methods.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1