Abstract

Modern radars are highly flexible systems, relying on digital antennas to dynamically control the radar beam shape and position through electronic circuits. Radar surveillance is performed by sequential emission of different radar beams. Optimization of radar surveillance requires finding a minimal subset of radar beams, which covers and ensures detection over the surveillance space, among a collection of available radar beams with different shapes and positions, thus minimizing the required scanning time. Optimal radar surveillance can be modelled by grid covering, a specific geometric case of set covering where the universe set is laid out on a grid, representing the radar surveillance space, which must be covered using available subsets, representing the radar beams detection areas. While the set cover problem is generally difficult to solve optimally, certain geometric cases can be optimized in polynomial time. This paper studies the theoretical complexity of grid cover problems used for modelling radar surveillance, proving that unidimensional grids can be covered by strongly polynomial algorithms based on dynamic programming, whereas optimal covering of bidimensional grids is generally non-deterministic polynomially hard.

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