163 research outputs found

    A 2-20 GHz Analog Lag-Correlator for Radio Interferometry

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    We present the design and testing of a 2-20 GHz continuum band analog lag correlator with 16 frequency channels for astronomical interferometry. The correlator has been designed for future use with a prototype single-baseline interferometer operating at 185-275 GHz. The design uses a broadband Wilkinson divider tree with integral thin-film resistors implemented on an alumina substrate, and custom-made broadband InGaP/GaAs Gilbert Cell multipliers. The prototype correlator has been fully bench-tested, together with the necessary readout electronics for acquisition of the output signals. The results of these measurements show that the response of the correlator is well behaved over the band. An investigation of the noise behaviour also shows that the signal-to-noise of the system is not limited by the correlator performance.Comment: accepted for publication by IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation & Measuremen

    A study of multilevel partial response signalling for transmission in a basic supergroup bandwidth

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    Includes bibliographical references.The work in this thesis is primarily directed toward the design, construction and testing of an experimental multilevel partial response signalling baseband system. The system will find practical application in existing frequency division multiplexed-frequency modulated microwave links. The basic supergroup bandwidth of these links is 240 kHz. The design requires a transmission rate of 1.024 Mb/s in this bandwidth. Class-4 15 partial response signalling is the coding technique suitable to achieve this. A pilot tone scheme is used to facilitate symbol timing recovery at the demodulator. A sixth order Butterworth low pass filter approximates the ideal raised-cosine Nyquist channel. A theoretical discussion on impairments caused by deviation from this channel is given. Since the experimental system was non-ideal, it produced a degradation in the channel signal to noise ratio. This degradation, coupled with other factors, showed that further development was necessary for the system to be suitable for connection into an existing microwave link

    Equalization of Third-Order Intermodulation Products in Wideband Direct Conversion Receivers

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    This paper reports a SAW-less direct-conversion receiver which utilizes a mixed-signal feedforward path to regenerate and adaptively cancel IM3 products, thus accomplishing system-level linearization. The receiver system performance is dominated by a custom integrated RF front end implemented in 130-nm CMOS and achieves an uncorrected out-of-band IIP3 of -7.1 dBm under the worst-case UMTS FDD Region 1 blocking specifications. Under IM3 equalization, the receiver achieves an effective IIP3 of +5.3 dBm and meets the UMTS BER sensitivity requirement with 3.7 dB of margin

    A LINEARIZATION METHOD FOR A UWB VCO-BASED CHIRP GENERATOR USING DUAL COMPENSATION

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    Ultra-Wideband (UWB) chirp generators are used on Frequency Modulated Continuous Wave (FMCW) radar systems for high-resolution and high-accuracy range measurements. At the Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS), we have developed two UWB radar sensors for high resolution measurements of surface elevation and snow cover over Greenland and Antarctica. These radar systems are routinely operated from both surface and airborne platforms. Low cost implementations of UWB chirp generators are possible using an UWB Voltage Controlled Oscillator (VCO). VCOs possess several advantages over other competing technologies, but their frequency-voltage tuning characteristics are inherently non-linear. This nonlinear relationship between the tuning voltage and the output frequency should be corrected with a linearization system to implement a linear frequency modulated (LFM) waveform, also known as a chirp. If the waveform is not properly linearized, undesired additional frequency modulation is found in the waveform. This additional frequency modulation results in undesired sidebands at the frequency spectrum of the Intermediate Frequency (IF) stage of the FMCW radar. Since the spectrum of the filtered IF stage represents the measured range, the uncorrected nonlinear behavior of the VCO will cause a degradation of the range sensing performance of a FMCW radar. This issue is intensified as the chirp rate and nominal range of the target increase. A linearization method has been developed to linearize the output of a VCO-based chirp generator with 6 GHz of bandwidth. The linearization system is composed of a Phase Lock Loop (PLL) and an external compensation added to the loop. The nonlinear behavior of the VCO was treated as added disturbances to the loop, and a wide loop bandwidth PLL was designed for wideband compensation of these disturbances. Moreover, the PLL requires a loop filter able to attenuate the reference spurs. The PLL has been designed with a loop bandwidth as wide as possible while maintaining the reference spur level below 35 dBc. Several design considerations were made for the large loop bandwidth design. Furthermore, the large variations in the tuning sensitivity of the oscillator forced a design with a large phase margin at the average tuning sensitivity. This design constraint degraded the tracking performance of the PLL. A second compensation signal, externally generated, was added to the compensation signal of the PLL. By adding a compensation signal, which was not affected by the frequency response effects of the loop compensation, the loop tracking error is reduced. This technique enabled us to produce an output chirp signal that is a much closer replica of the scaled version of the reference signal. Furthermore, a type 1 PLL was chosen for improved transient response, compared to that of the type 2 PLL. This type of PLL requires an external compensation to obtain a finite steady state error when applying a frequency ramp to the input. The external compensation signal required to solve this issue was included in the second compensation signal mentioned above. Measurements for the PLL performance and the chirp generator performance were performed in the laboratory using a radar demonstrator. The experimental results show that the designed loop bandwidth was successfully achieved without significantly increasing the spurious signal level. The chirp generator measurements show a direct relationship between the bandwidth of the external compensation and the range resolution performance

    Signal processing with optical delay line filters for high bit rate transmission systems

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    In den letzten Jahrzehnten ist das globale Kommunikationssystem in einem immer grĂ¶ĂŸerem Maße ein integraler Bestandteil des tĂ€glichen Lebens geworden. Optische Kommunikationssysteme sind die technologische Basis fĂŒr diese Entwicklung. Nur Fasern können die riesige benötigte Bandbreite bereitstellen. WĂ€hrend fĂŒr die ersten optischen Übertragungssysteme die Faser als "flacher" Kanal betrachtet werden konnte, machen WellenlĂ€ngenmultiplex und steigende Übertragungsraten die Einbeziehung von immer mehr physikalischen Effekten notwendig. Bei einer Erhöhung der Kanaldatenrate auf 40 Gbit/s und mehr ist die statische Kompensation von chromatischer Dispersion nicht mehr ausreichend. Die intrinsische Toleranz der Modulationsformate gegenĂŒber Dispersion nimmt quadratisch mit der Symbolrate ab. Daher können beispielsweise durch UmwelteinflĂŒsse hervorgerufene Dispersionsschwankungen die Dispersionstoleranz der Modulationsformate ĂŒberschreiten. Dies macht eine adaptive Dispersionskompensation notwendig, was gleichzeitig auch Dispersionsmonitoring erfordert, um den adaptiven Kompensator steuern zu können. Vorhandene Links können mit Restdispersionskompensatoren ausgestattet werden, um sie fĂŒr HochgeschwindigkeitsĂŒbertragungen zu ertĂŒchtigen. Optische Kompensationstechniken sind unabhĂ€ngig von der Kanaldatenrate. Daher wird eine Erhöhung der Datenrate problemlos unterstĂŒtzt. Optische Kompensatoren können WDM-fĂ€hig gebaut werden, um mehrere KanĂ€le auf einmal zu entzerren. Das Buch beschĂ€ftigt sich mit optischen Delay-Line-Filtern als eine Klasse von optischen Kompensatoren. Die Filtersynthese von solchen Delay-Line-Filtern wird behandelt. Der Zusammenhang zwischen optischen Filtern und digitalen FIR-Filtern mit komplexen Koeffizienten im Zusammenhang mit kohĂ€renter Detektion wird aufgezeigt. Iterative und analytische Methoden, die die Koeffizienten fĂŒr dispersions- und dispersions-slope-kompensierende Filter produzieren, werden untersucht. Genauso wichtig wie die Kompensation von Dispersion ist die SchĂ€tzung der Dispersion eines Signals. Mit Delay-Line-Filtern können die RestseitenbĂ€nder eines Signals genutzt werden, um die Dispersion zu messen. Alternativ kann nichtlineare Detektion angewandt werden, um die Pulsverbreiterung, die hauptsĂ€chlich von der Dispersion herrĂŒhrt, zu schĂ€tzen. Mit gemeinsamer Dispersionskompensation und Dispersionsmonitoring können Dispersionskompensatoren auf die Signalverzerrungen eingestellt werden. Spezielle Eigenschaften der Filter zusammen mit der analytischen Beschreibung können genutzt werden, um schnelle und zuverlĂ€ssige Steueralgorithmen zur Filtereinstellung bereitzustellen. Schließlich wurden Prototypen derartiger faseroptischen Kompensatoren von chromatischer Dispersion und Dispersions-Slope hergestellt und charakterisiert. Die Einheiten und ihr Systemverhalten wird gezeigt und diskutiert.Over the course of the past decades, the global communication system has become a central part of people's everyday lives. Optical communication systems are the technological basis for this development. Only fibers can provide the huge bandwidth that is required. Where the fiber could be regarded as a flat channel for the first optical transmission systems wavelength multiplexing and increasing line rates made it necessary to take more and more physical effects into account. When the line rates are increased to 40 Gbit/s and higher static chromatic dispersion compensation is not enough. The modulation format's intrinsic tolerance for dispersion decreases quadratically with the symbol rate. Thus, environmentally induced chromatic dispersion fluctuations may exceed the dispersion tolerance of the modulation formats. This makes an adaptive dispersion compensation necessary implying also the need for a monitoring scheme to steer the adaptive compensator. Legacy links that are CD-compensated by DCFs can be upgraded with residual dispersion compensators to make them ready for high speed transmission. Optical compensation is independent from the line rate. Hence, increasing the data rates is inherently supported. Optical compensators can be built WDM ready compensating multiple channels at once. The book deals with optical delay line filters as one class of optical compensators. The filter synthesis of such delay line filters is addressed. The connection between optical filters and digital FIR filters with complex coefficients that are used in conjunction with coherent detection could be shown. Iterative and analytical methods that produce the coefficients for dispersion (and also dispersion slope) compensating filters are researched. As important as the compensation of dispersion is the estimation of the dispersion of a signal. Using delay line filters, the vestigial sidebands of a signal can be used to measure the dispersion. Alternatively, nonlinear detection can be used to estimate the pulse broadening which is caused mainly by dispersion. With dispersion compensation and dispersion monitoring, dispersion compensators can be adapted to the signal's impairment. Special properties of the filter in conjunction with an analytical description can be used to provide a fast and reliable control algorithm for setting the filter to a given dispersion and centering it on a signal. Finally, prototypes of such fiber optic chromatic dispersion and dispersion slope compensation filters were manufactured and characterized. The device and system characterization of the prototypes is presented and discussed

    Band-pass waveguide filters and multiplexers design by the structure segmentation technique

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    This work presents a technique for the efficient design of bandpass waveguide microwave filters using a segmentation technique. The segmentation technique was originally developed for in-line filters, and the main contribution of this work is in the combination of this technique with the coupling matrix formalism. In this way we have used this useful design technique for complex coupling topologies, beyond the in-line configuration. As an example some dual mode filters are designed using the new coupling matrix formalism, validating the theory presented. In addition, this technique has been used in the design of diplexers and triplexers with the previously designed filters. Furthermore, a novel dual-mode filter topology that can be implemented through this technique is proposed. Finally, in order to validate these contributions, a dual-mode filter has been designed with the introduced topology for a real application in the space sector in collaboration with the European Space Agency.Universidad Politécnica de Cartagen
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