Phase-comparison monopulse is a technique used in radio frequency (RF) applications such as
radar
Radar is a system that uses radio waves to determine the distance ('' ranging''), direction ( azimuth and elevation angles), and radial velocity of objects relative to the site. It is a radiodetermination method used to detect and track ...
and
direction finding
Direction finding (DF), radio direction finding (RDF), or radiogoniometry is the use of radio waves to determine the direction to a radio source. The source may be a cooperating radio transmitter or may be an inadvertent source, a naturall ...
to accurately estimate the direction of arrival of a signal from the phase difference of the signal measured on two (or more) separated antennas
or more typically from displaced phase centers of an array antenna. Phase-comparison monopulse differs from
amplitude-comparison monopulse
Amplitude-comparison monopulse refers to a common direction finding technique. This method is used in monopulse radar, electronic warfare and radio astronomy. Amplitude monopulse antennas are usually reflector antennas.
Approach
Two overlap ...
in that the former uses displaced phase centers with a common beam pointing direction, while the latter uses a common phase center and displaced beam pointing directions.
In phase-comparison monopulse, typically an array is subdivided into sub-arrays, and then a "sum" and a "difference" or "del" channel are formed. For a linear array, these subarrays would each be half of the elements, divided in the middle. For a planar array, these sub-arrays would be the four quadrants of the array, each with 1/4 of the array's elements. In a linear array, the output of each sub-array is summed to form the "sum" channel, and the same outputs are subtracted to form the "del" channel. The monopulse ratio is formed by dividing the imaginary part of the del channel by the real part of the sum channel. This ratio gives an error signal that indicates to a high degree of accuracy the actual target angle as compared to the center of the beam. For a planar array, one sum channel is formed as the sum of the outputs of all four quadrants, but two del channels are formed, one for the elevation dimension and one for the orthogonal azimuth dimension. Two monopulse ratios are formed just as with a linear array, each one indicating the deviation angle in one dimension from the center of the beam.
There are some common misconceptions about phase comparison monopulse. First, only one beam is formed. Monopulse processing is done entirely with the received signal in the array manifold and beam forming network. Speaking in terms of only one dimension for clarity, such as with a linear array, the signal is received by the array and summed into each of two subarrays with displaced phase centers. The sum channel is formed simply by adding these two subarray outputs, and the result is exactly the same as if the entire array was initially summed in one step. The del channel is formed simply by subtracting these same subarray outputs. Second, phase-comparison monopulse doesn't technically actually do a phase comparison, but rather simply divides the del channel by the sum channel to arrive at a ratio wherein the angle information is encoded. The following mathematical derivation should make it clear why this is so.
Mathematics
Sum Pattern
We can define the beam pattern (
array factor) of a
uniform linear array (ULA) with N elements, as:
:
, where
is the array
manifold vector
In mathematics, a manifold is a topological space that locally resembles Euclidean space near each point. More precisely, an n-dimensional manifold, or ''n-manifold'' for short, is a topological space with the property that each point has a n ...
and
is a vector of complex weights representing amplitude and phase adjustments applied to each antenna element. The manifold vector,
, fully encapsulates all of the spatial properties of the array.
is the distance between elements of the array, and
is the angle of arrival of an incident plane wave, defined from end-fire, i.e.,
is a signal from array broadside.
It is common to perform a variable substitution to
-space, where
, and therefore we have:
:
and we can more easily see that
is simply the phase shift between adjacent elements. The
term simply references the absolute phase to the physical center of the array.
Notice that this result is the same if we instead first sum each half of the array, then add those results together.
:
The weight vector is a combination of a
steering vector
Steering is the control of the direction of motion or the components that enable its control. Steering is achieved through various arrangements, among them ailerons for airplanes, rudders for boats, cylic tilting of rotors for helicopters, an ...
that steers the beam in a steered direction,
, using phase adjustments and an amplitude taper that is often applied to reduce
sidelobes
In antenna engineering, sidelobes are the lobes (local maxima) of the far field radiation pattern of an antenna or other radiation source, that are not the ''main lobe''.
The radiation pattern of most antennas shows a pattern of "''lobes''" ...
. Thus,
, and
:
, where
.
We can clearly see now that the beam pattern, in
-space, is the spatial equivalent of the
discrete time Fourier transform
In mathematics, the discrete-time Fourier transform (DTFT) is a form of Fourier analysis that is applicable to a sequence of discrete values.
The DTFT is often used to analyze samples of a continuous function. The term ''discrete-time'' refers ...
(DTFT) of the array amplitude tapering vector times a linear phase term. The advantage of
-space is that the beam shape is identical no matter where it is steered, and is only a function of the deviation of the desired target phase from the actual target phase.
Let us now assume an un-tapered, normalized array with
. The beam pattern can be easily shown to be the familiar
aliased sinc (asinc) function:
:
This pattern is also known, for monopulse purposes, as the "sum" pattern, as it was obtained by summing all of the elements together. Going forward we will suppress the
subscript and instead use only
with the understanding that it represents the deviation of the steered target phase and the actual target phase.
Difference Pattern
Let us now develop the monopulse "difference" or "del" pattern by dividing the array into two equal halves called subarrays. We could have just as easily derived the sum pattern by first determining the pattern of each subarray individually and adding these two results together. In monopulse practice, this is what is actually done. The reader is left to show that
is conjugate symmetric, so it can be re-written in terms of only its first half,
using an exchange matrix,
, that "flips" this vector.
:
Note that
. Assuming that N is even (we could just as easily develop this using an odd N),
:
If we assume that the weight matrix is also conjugate symmetric (a good assumption), then
:
and the sum beam pattern can be rewritten as:
:
The difference or "del" pattern can easily be inferred from the sum pattern simply by flipping the sign of the weights for the second half of the array:
:
Again assuming that
, the del pattern can be shown to reduce to:
:
Monopulse Ratio
The monopulse ratio is formed as:
:
One can see that, within the 3dB beam width of the system, the monopulse ratio is almost linear. In fact, for many systems a linear approximation is good enough. One can also note that the monopulse ratio is continuous within the null-to-null beam width, but has asymptotes that occur at the beam nulls. Therefore, the monopulse ratio is only accurate to measure the deviation angle of a target within the main lobe of the system. However, targets detected in the sidelines of a system, if not mitigated, will produce erroneous results regardless.
Concept of Operations
Before performing monopulse processing, a system must first detect a target, which it does as normal using the sum channel. All of the typical measurements that a non-monopulse system make are done using the sum channel, e.g., range, Doppler, and angle. However, the angle measurement is limited in that the target could be anywhere within the beam width of the sum beam, and therefore the system can only assume that the beam pointing direction is the same as the actual target angle. In reality, of course, the actual target angle and the beam steered angle will differ.
Therefore, a monopulse processor functions by first detecting and measuring the target signal on the sum channel. Then, only as necessary for detected targets, it measures the same signal on the "del" channel, dividing the imaginary part of this result by the real part of the "sum" channel, then converting this ratio to a deviation angle using the relationships:
:
and
:
This deviation angle, which can be positive or negative, is added to the beam pointing angle to arrive at the more accurate estimate of the actual target bearing angle. Of course, if the array is 2-dimensional, such as a planar array, there are two del channels, one for elevation and one for azimuth, and therefore two monopulse ratios are formed.
See also
*
Very-long-baseline interferometry
Very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI) is a type of astronomical interferometry used in radio astronomy. In VLBI a signal from an astronomical radio source, such as a quasar, is collected at multiple radio telescopes on Earth or in space. T ...
*
Amplitude-comparison monopulse
Amplitude-comparison monopulse refers to a common direction finding technique. This method is used in monopulse radar, electronic warfare and radio astronomy. Amplitude monopulse antennas are usually reflector antennas.
Approach
Two overlap ...
*
Monopulse radar
Monopulse radar is a radar system that uses additional encoding of the radio signal to provide accurate directional information. The name refers to its ability to extract range and direction from a single signal pulse.
Monopulse radar avoids prob ...
References
{{reflist
Interferometry
Radar