Comprehensive Review of Doppler Shift Localization Methods: Advances, Limitations, and Research Opportunities
Rafal Szczepanik

TL;DR
This comprehensive review analyzes Doppler shift localization methods across various environments, highlighting recent advances, limitations, and future research directions for non-cooperative emitter geolocation without GNSS.
Contribution
It introduces a unifying taxonomy of five technique families, compares inference frameworks under realistic impairments, and provides design recommendations for diverse deployment scenarios.
Findings
Prototype accuracies reach meter scale with low hardware complexity.
Derivative Doppler metrics can tighten the Cramer-Rao bound under certain conditions.
Environment-specific deployments demonstrate practical applicability.
Abstract
Reliable geolocation of non-cooperative emitters in environments where Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) are unavailable or degraded is a key enabler for spectrum regulation, emergency response, autonomous mobility, and Integrated Sensing and Communication (ISAC) services in 5G/6G systems. Doppler-based techniques - from single-receiver Signal Doppler Frequency (SDF) fixes through multi-node Frequency Difference of Arrival (FDOA) and Direct Position Determination (DPD) to derivative-enhanced and learning-assisted hybrids - exploit radial-velocity-induced frequency shifts as a passive, high-resolution localization cue accessible with commodity software-defined radios, millimeter-wave access points, or acoustic sensors. This review consolidates over a decade of research across radio, acoustic, and satellite domains. It introduces a unifying taxonomy that divides the field into…
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