Abstract
This paper aims to detect a target that crosses the baseline connecting the source and the receiver in shallow-water environments, which is a special scenario for a bistatic sonar system. In such a detection scenario, an intense sound wave, known as the direct blast, propagates directly from the source to the receiver without target scattering. This direct blast usually arrives at the receiver simultaneously with the forward scattering signal and exhibits a larger intensity than the signal, posing a significant challenge for target detection. In this paper, a range-domain subspace is constructed by the horizontal distance between the source/target and each element of a horizontal linear array (HLA) when the ranges of environmental parameters are known a priori. Meanwhile, a range-domain subspace detector based on direct blast suppression (RSD-DS) is proposed for forward scattering detection. The source and the target are located at different positions, so the direct blast and the scattered signal are in different range-domain subspaces. By projecting the received data onto the orthogonal complement subspace of the direct blast subspace, the direct blast can be suppressed and the signal that lies outside the direct blast subspace is used for target detection. The simulation results indicate that the proposed RSD-DS exhibits a performance close to the generalized likelihood ratio detector (GLRD) while requiring less prior knowledge of environments (only known are the ranges of the sediment sound speed and the bottom sound speed), and its robustness to environmental uncertainties is better than that of the latter. Moreover, the proposed RSD-DS exhibits better immunity against the direct blast than the GLRD, since it can still work effectively at a signal-to-direct blast ratio (SDR) of −30 dB, while the GLRD stops working in this case.
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