English

Massive MIMO Radar for Target Detection

Signal Processing 2020-01-16 v4 Information Theory math.IT

Abstract

Since the seminal paper by Marzetta from 2010, the Massive MIMO paradigm in communication systems has changed from being a theoretical scaled-up version of MIMO, with an infinite number of antennas, to a practical technology. Its key concepts have been adopted in the 5G new radio standard and base stations, where 6464 fully-digital transceivers have been commercially deployed. Motivated by these recent developments, this paper considers a co-located MIMO radar with MTM_T transmitting and MRM_R receiving antennas and explores the potential benefits of having a large number of virtual spatial antenna channels N=MTMRN=M_TM_R. Particularly, we focus on the target detection problem and develop a \textit{robust} Wald-type test that guarantees certain detection performance, regardless of the unknown statistical characterization of the clutter disturbance. Closed-form expressions for the probabilities of false alarm and detection are derived for the asymptotic regime NN\to \infty. Numerical results are used to validate the asymptotic analysis in the finite system regime with different disturbance models. Our results imply that there always exists a sufficient number of antennas for which the performance requirements are satisfied, without any a-priori knowledge of the clutter statistics. This is referred to as the Massive MIMO regime of the radar system.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1906.06191,
  title  = {Massive MIMO Radar for Target Detection},
  author = {Stefano Fortunati and Luca Sanguinetti and Fulvio Gini and Maria S. Greco and Braham Himed},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1906.06191},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing. A related work has been presented at ICASSP19, Brighton, UK, and is available at arXiv:1904.04184

R2 v1 2026-06-23T09:53:50.880Z