Abstract

In underwater acoustic signal processing, conventional spatial spectrum estimation and the associated direction-of-arrival estimation are often impaired by strong near-field interferences at the same frequency as the far-field target signal, leading to significant performance degradation and even detection failure. In contrast to prevalent near-field interference suppression algorithms that require prior knowledge of near-field interference positions, this paper proposes a super-resolution spatial spectrum reconstruction algorithm designed for more general scenarios where crucial information about the near-field interference, such as positions and magnitudes, is unknown. The proposed algorithm demonstrates its adaptability in mitigating unknown near-field interference and achieves this by leveraging rank constraint-based relaxation and alternating minimization, resulting in an effective spatial spectrum reconstruction strategy. The efficacy of the proposed spatial spectrum reconstruction method in handling strong near-field interference is confirmed through analysis of simulated and synthetic experimental data. It exhibits superiority over traditional competitors in terms of resolution, denoising capabilities, and estimation accuracy. Moreover, it achieves comparable results to algorithms that utilize prior information about near-field interference positions. The enhanced performance remains consistent even in challenging scenarios such as snapshot deficiency and low signal-to-noise ratios.

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