Journal of Systems Engineering and Electronics ›› 2013, Vol. 24 ›› Issue (5): 749-760.doi: 10.1109/JSEE.2013.00088

• ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Shallow water source localization using a mobile short horizontal array

Dexin Zhao1,*, Woojae Seong2, Keunhwa Lee3, and Zhiping Huang1   

  1. 1. Department of Instrument Science and Technology, College of Mechatronics and Automation,
    National University of Defense Technology, Changsha 410073, China;
    2. Department of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering, College of Engineering,
    Seoul National University, Seoul 152-742, Republic of Korea;
    3. Research Institute and Marine System Engineering, Seoul National University, Seoul 152-742, Republic of Korea
  • Online:2013-10-25 Published:2010-01-03

Abstract:

This paper presents an approach to the challenging issue of passive source localization in shallow water using a mobile short horizontal linear array with length less than ten meters. The short array can be conveniently placed on autonomous underwater vehicles and deployed for adaptive spatial sampling. However, the use of such small aperture passive sonar systems makes it difficult to acquire sufficient spatial gain for localizing long-range sources. To meet the requirement, a localization approach that employs matched-field based techniques that enable the short horizontal linear array is used to passively localize acoustic sources in shallow water. Furthermore, the broadband processing and inter-position processing provide robustness against ocean environmental mismatch and enhance the stability of the estimation process. The proposed approach’s ability to localize acoustic sources in shallow water at different signal-to-noise ratios is examined through the synthetic test cases where the sources are located at the endfire and some other bearing of the mobile short horizontal linear array. The presented results demonstrate that the positional parameters of the estimated source build up over time as the array moves at a low speed along a straight line at a constant depth.