Abstract

In recent years, the high-frequency hybrid sky-surface wave radar (HSSWR) has been increasingly used for target detection applications. Nevertheless, the specific bistatic system layout and the phase path disturbances induced by the ionospheric propagation channel may severely spread the sea clutter spectrum, thereby deteriorating the detection ability of the HSSWR for slow-moving targets. In this work, a novel subspace method based on the hybrid use of the amplitude and phase estimator (APES) and the orthogonal projection (OP) in the spatial–temporal domain, denoted as the APES-OP method, is proposed to suppress the spreading first-order sea clutter of the HSSWR. The distribution characteristics of targets and first-order sea clutter in the spatial–temporal domain were investigated, and a time-domain subspace signal model was adopted to describe targets perturbed by ionospheric phase path modulation. An APES filter was adopted to filter out the potential targets with a traversal approach to avoid attenuating desired signals while suppressing sea clutter. After that, sampling data from multi-channels and slow-time domains at the cell under test were employed to construct a spatial–temporal matrix, which was then utilized to obtain the sea clutter subspace by singular value decomposition. Simulation results indicate that the proposed algorithm can suppress sea clutter while retaining the target, even if the target is buried by sea clutter. The processing results of measured data further demonstrate the efficiency of the proposed algorithm. After sea clutter suppression, the target obscured by clutter can be revealed, and the signal-to-clutter ratio of the target is greatly improved.

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