In this work, we take advantage of the nonlinear characteristics of chaotic systems for joint multistatic radar and communication systems (RadComm). Firstly, we consider N 2-dimensional chaotic maps whose control parameters are varied to generate a family of chaotic signals. Each of these chaotic signals is filtered and encoded with antipodal bits. These chaotic signals exhibit noise-like properties, so they decorrelate quickly with adjacent samples. Consequently, the encoded chaotic signals are superposed to generate a multiplexed signal 's(n)' used for multistatic RadComm transmission. At the communication receiver, we use the same N chaotic maps to generate the chaotic signals that are further filtered. Each filtered chaotic signal correlates with the received multiplexed signal to decode the information. Using bit-error rates (BER), we show that the proposed communication approach is of high quality. For multistatic configuration, we assume the number of radar nodes is ≤ N. Each node has one chaotic map that can generate a reference chaotic signal. This reference signal is matched with the echo reflected by the target, which is a delayed and Doppler-shifted version of s(n). Using a matched-filtered bank, we can obtain a high-resolution image of a target at each node. Since N ≥ 1, we can view the target from multiple viewpoints, extracting additional information from various dimensions that may not be possible with joint monostatic RadComm or bistatic RadComm setups.
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