Abstract

The effect of jammer power on the performance of adaptive arrays is studied. It is shown that the output signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) of an adaptive array is a function of jammer power. In the presence of a wide-band jammer, the output SINR of the array decreases with an increase in jammer power and eventually goes to zero. Unlike continuous wave (CW) jammers, a wide-band jammer does not go through power inversion. Instead, as the jammer power is increased, the interference-to-noise ratio (INR) at the array output shows oscillations. For large jammer power, the output INR increases with an increase in jammer power.

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