IEEE APS-AESS-MTT Distinguished Lecture with Dr. Eli Brookner, Raytheon Company (retired)
Distinguished Guest Lecturer: Eli Brookner
TITLE: MIMO Radars and Their Conventional Equivalents
Date: Thursday, February 26, 2015 Time: 6:00 PM
Location: MIT Lincoln Laboratory (A-Cafe) Refreshments served at 5:30pm
Abstract: This talk is given in tutorial form for the benefit of those
not familiar with MIMO. The aim is to give physical insight into MIMO and its
conventional equivalents. The math will be limited to the basic Fourier
Transform which we all learned in undergraduate college. We will start with an
explanation of MIMO and conventional arrays. It had been shown by the speaker
that contrary to common belief a MIMO
full/thin array does not provide orders of magnitude better resolution and
accuracy (10x, 100x or 1000x better) than a conventional array. Specifically, It
was shown that that a conventional full/thin array can do just as well as
a MIMO full/thin array. The conventional full/thin array had some
grating lobes (GLs) but these were dealt with. Here a new conventional array
that does not have GLs but has the SAME
accuracy and resolution as the MIMO full/thin array is presented. It is a conventional thin/full array radar
which is the conventional full/thin array radar with the roles of
the arrays reversed, thin array transmitting and full array receiving. It is
also shown that conventional equivalents
to MIMO radar systems can do just as well as the MIMO systems in rejecting
barrage-noise jammers, repeater jammers, hot-clutter jammers and main-lobe
jammers. Signal processing loads, waveforms and the operation of the MIMO and
its equivalents are detailed.
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BEE: The City College of the City of New York, ’53, MEE and DrSc: Columbia University ’55 and ’62.
Received IEEE 2006 Dennis J. Picard Medal for Radar Technology & Application “For Pioneering Contributions to Phased Array Radar System Designs, to Radar Signal Processing Designs, and to Continuing Education Programs for Radar Engineers”; IEEE ’03 Warren White Award; Journal of the Franklin Institute Premium Award for best paper award for 1966; IEEE Wheeler Prize for Best Applications Paper for 1998. Fellow of IEEE, AIAA, MSS. Member of the National Academies Panel on Sensors and Electron Devicesfor Review of Army Research Laboratory Sensors and Electron Devices Directorate (SEDD)
Published four books: Tracking and Kalman Filtering Made Easy, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1998; Practical Phased Array Antenna Systems (1991), Aspects of Modern Radar (1988), and Radar Technology (1977), Artech House. Gives courses on Radar, Phased Arrays and Tracking around the world (25 countries). Over 10,000 attended these courses. Banquet/keynote speaker twelve times. >230 papers, talks and correspondences, >100 invited. Six paper reprinted in Books of Reprints (one in two books). Contributed chapters to three books. Nine patents.