Abstract

An advanced detection and tracking system is being developed for the U.S. Navy's Relocatable Over‐the‐Horizon Radar (ROTHR) to provide improved tracking performance against small aircraft typically used in drug‐smuggling activities. The development is based on the Maximum Likelihood Adaptive Neural System (MLANS), a model‐based neural network that combines advantages of neural network and model‐based algorithmic approaches. The objective of the MLANS tracker development effort is to address user requirements for increased detection and tracking capability in clutter and improved track position, heading, and speed accuracy. The MLANS tracker is expected to outperform other approaches to detection and tracking for the following reasons. It incorporates adaptive internal models of target return signals, target tracks and maneuvers, and clutter signals, which leads to concurrent clutter suppression, detection, and tracking (track‐before‐detect). It is not combinatorial and thus does not require any thresholding or peak picking and can track in low signal‐to‐noise conditions. It incorporates superresolution spectrum estimation techniques exceeding the performance of conventional maximum likelihood and maximum entropy methods. The unique spectrum estimation method is based on the Einsteinian interpretation of the ROTHR received energy spectrum as a probability density of signal frequency. The MLANS neural architecture and learning mechanism are founded on spectrum models and maximization of the “Einsteinian” likelihood, allowing knowledge of the physical behavior of both targets and clutter to be injected into the tracker algorithms. The paper describes the addressed requirements and expected improvements, theoretical foundations, engineering methodology, and results of the development effort to date.

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