Defense Notices


All students and faculty are welcome to attend the final defense of EECS graduate students completing their M.S. or Ph.D. degrees. Defense notices for M.S./Ph.D. presentations for this year and several previous years are listed below in reverse chronological order.

Students who are nearing the completion of their M.S./Ph.D. research should schedule their final defenses through the EECS graduate office at least THREE WEEKS PRIOR to their presentation date so that there is time to complete the degree requirements check, and post the presentation announcement online.

Upcoming Defense Notices

Jennifer Quirk

Aspects of Doppler-Tolerant Radar Waveforms

When & Where:


Nichols Hall, Room 246 (Executive Conference Room)

Committee Members:

Shannon Blunt, Chair
Patrick McCormick
Charles Mohr
James Stiles
Zsolt Talata

Abstract

The Doppler tolerance of a waveform refers to its behavior when subjected to a fast-time Doppler shift imposed by scattering that involves nonnegligible radial velocity. While previous efforts have established decision-based criteria that lead to a binary judgment of Doppler tolerant or intolerant, it is also useful to establish a measure of the degree of Doppler tolerance. The purpose in doing so is to establish a consistent standard, thereby permitting assessment across different parameterizations, as well as introducing a Doppler “quasi-tolerant” trade-space that can ultimately inform automated/cognitive waveform design in increasingly complex and dynamic radio frequency (RF) environments. 

Separately, the application of slow-time coding (STC) to the Doppler-tolerant linear FM (LFM) waveform has been examined for disambiguation of multiple range ambiguities. However, using STC with non-adaptive Doppler processing often results in high Doppler “cross-ambiguity” side lobes that can hinder range disambiguation despite the degree of separability imparted by STC. To enhance this separability, a gradient-based optimization of STC sequences is developed, and a “multi-range” (MR) modification to the reiterative super-resolution (RISR) approach that accounts for the distinct range interval structures from STC is examined. The efficacy of these approaches is demonstrated using open-air measurements. 

The proposed work to appear in the final dissertation focuses on the connection between Doppler tolerance and STC. The first proposal includes the development of a gradient-based optimization procedure to generate Doppler quasi-tolerant random FM (RFM) waveforms. Other proposals consider limitations of STC, particularly when processed with MR-RISR. The final proposal introduces an “intrapulse” modification of the STC/LFM structure to achieve enhanced sup pression of range-folded scattering in certain delay/Doppler regions while retaining a degree of Doppler tolerance.


Past Defense Notices

Dates

CHRISTOPHER GIFFORD

Heterogeneous Collaborative Learning for Robotics and Applied Artificial Intelligence

When & Where:


317 Nichols Hall

Committee Members:

Arvin Agah, Chair
Chris Allen
Swapan Chakrabarti
Carl Leuschen
Georgios Tsoflias

Abstract