Abstract

Fields of distributed passive and multistatic active sonar sensors provide surveillance capabilities against quiet submarine threats in Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) scenarios. The joint cooperative use of passive and active sonar offers synergistic and complimentary acoustic performance as well as operational advantages. However, a significant challenge of heterogeneous, multi-sensor systems is the successful fusion of information from the various sensors to enable robust target detection, classification, localization, and tracking. This paper describes the formation of a passive acoustic track that may be used to cue an active multistatic acoustic tracking system. A cue from a passive acoustic track reduces the false track rate in the active tracker by focusing the search area and selectively initiating active tracks. The passive track is assumed to originate from a fixed passive acoustic horizontal line array (HLA) which is unable to determine target range or resolve the familiar left-right ambiguity. However, passive systems can predict Closest-Point-of-Approach (CPA) events. For each CPA event, a cue can be forwarded to the active system for multistatic active track initiation. This paper presents a minimal parametric representation for a passive acoustic track. It also describes an algorithm for obtaining initial estimates of parameters that can be used to initiate the passive track more effectively. A performance evaluation is given. This paper also describes the conversion of the passive track to pseudo-coordinates that are convenient for use with a multistatic tracking system. Lastly, a method for measuring passive track quality is described which determines if track quality is sufficient to justify cueing the active multistatic system.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call