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Characterizing the Impact of Ionospheric Wave Structures on Coordinate Registration.

Award Information
Agency: Department of Defense
Branch: Air Force
Contract: FA9453-14-C-0306
Agency Tracking Number: F131-094-0888
Amount: $1,492,193.00
Phase: Phase II
Program: SBIR
Solicitation Topic Code: AF131-094
Solicitation Number: 2013.2
Timeline
Solicitation Year: 2014
Award Year: 2014
Award Start Date (Proposal Award Date): 2014-08-13
Award End Date (Contract End Date): 2016-12-01
Small Business Information
P.O. Box 3027
Bellevue, WA 98009-3027
United States
DUNS: 151471349
HUBZone Owned: No
Woman Owned: No
Socially and Economically Disadvantaged: No
Principal Investigator
 L.J. Nickisch
 Sr. Research Scientist
 (831) 582-4905
 LJ@nwra.com
Business Contact
 Joan Oltman-Shay
Title: President
Phone: (425) 556-9055
Email: contracts-grants@nwra.com
Research Institution
N/A
Abstract

ABSTRACT:Coordinate Registration (CR) of OTHR targets requires accurate real-time ionospheric modeling coupled with HF propagation calculations to convert radar-measured target signal delays and beam steers to geographical position.Our team is the developer of one of the most sophisticated ionospheric data assimilation capabilities currently in existence, GPSII (GPS Ionospheric Inversion; pronounced gypsy).Our team is also very experienced in developing algorithms for OTHR CR; we have developed an extensive computational HF propagation tool set.One of the major limitations in CR accuracy is the inability of current CR algorithms to properly account for traveling ionospheric disturbances (TIDs).Our previous investigations into TID mitigation produced a number of tools and ideas that we here propose to architect into a significant advance in TID mitigation.In Phase I we developed an HF propagation simulation capability that combines a model of TIDs with 3D ray tracing to allow generation of simulated TID-affected OTH radar data (especially backscatter ionograms).These simulated data were successfully used to demonstrate the effectiveness of ionospheric data assimilation in reconstructing the ionospheric TID structure affecting OTHR measurements.In Phase II we will extend and test this methodology with real OTHR measurements using diagnostics from a downrange HF Doppler sounder.BENEFIT:An ionospheric data assimilation method with the fidelity to model TIDs in real time will allow improved OTHR Coordinate Registration accuracy.Improved CR accuracy will enhance the applicability of OTHR as a wide area surveillance asset for Air Force and Homeland Security applications with dramatic cost savings over alternative microwave radar solutions.In the US counter drug mission of the current ROTHR system, it is necessary for intercepting aircraft to perform cold-nose intercepts where onboard radars are deactivated (so traffickers wont detect the interceptors and dump their contraband to evade arrest).To visually spot the target aircraft, it is necessary for the OTH radar to guide the intercepting airplane to within a couple of kilometers of the target.However, TID-caused coordinate registration errors can easily be several tens of kilometers, so mitigation of these errors would have immediate benefit to the existing ROTHR system.Planned use of next-generation OTHRs for cruise missile and ballistic missile detection and trajectory estimation will benefit by mitigation of TID-induced CR errors to achieve sufficient accuracy for handoff to millimeter wave radars and IR sensors.While achieving good TID mitigation for OTHR is primarily our Phase II goal, the propagation simulation tools developed under Phase I will benefit the Air Force by providing the ability to perform studies in simulation to demonstrate the utility of OTHR as a surveillance asset in stressing TID environments.

* Information listed above is at the time of submission. *

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