The Partial Relaxation approach has recently been proposed to solve the Direction-of-Arrival estimation problem [1], [2]. In this paper, we investigate the outlier production mechanism of the Partially Relaxed Deterministic Maximum Likelihood (PR-DML) Direction-of-Arrival estimator using tools from Random Matrix Theory. Instead of applying a single source approximation to multi-source estimation criteria, which is the case for the MUSIC algorithm, the conventional beamformer, or the Capon beamformer, the Partial Relaxation approach accounts for the existence of multiple sources using a non-parametric modification of the signal model. In this paper, an accurate description of the probability of resolution for the PR-DML estimator is provided by analyzing the asymptotic behavior of the PR-DML cost function, assuming that both the number of antennas and the number of snapshots increase without bound at the same rate. The finite dimensional distribution of the PR-DML cost function is shown to be Gaussian in this asymptotic regime and this result is used to compute the probability of resolution.
The Partial Relaxation approach has recently been proposed to solve the Direction-of-Arrival estimation problem [1, 2]. In this paper, we investigate the outlier production mechanism of the Partially Relaxed Deterministic Maximum Likelihood (PR-DML) Direction-of-Arrival estimator using tools from Random Matrix Theory. An accurate description of the probability of resolution for the PR-DML estimator is provided by analyzing the asymptotic stochastic behavior of the PR-DML cost function, assuming that both the number of antennas and the number of snapshots increase without bound at the same rate. The finite dimensional distribution of the PR-DML cost function is shown to be Gaussian in this asymptotic regime and this result is used to compute the probability of resolution.
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