238 research outputs found

    TDRSS telecommunications system, PN code analysis

    Get PDF
    The pseudo noise (PN) codes required to support the TDRSS telecommunications services are analyzed and the impact of alternate coding techniques on the user transponder equipment, the TDRSS equipment, and all factors that contribute to the acquisition and performance of these telecommunication services is assessed. Possible alternatives to the currently proposed hybrid FH/direct sequence acquisition procedures are considered and compared relative to acquisition time, implementation complexity, operational reliability, and cost. The hybrid FH/direct sequence technique is analyzed and rejected in favor of a recommended approach which minimizes acquisition time and user transponder complexity while maximizing probability of acquisition and overall link reliability

    A novel maximal-length sequence synchronisation network

    Get PDF
    Spread Spectrum has become a popular digital modulation scheme in recent years. The advantages the scheme offers, at the expense of bandwidth, make it attractive in a multitude of commercial applications. The most common method, and the one of interest in this thesis, of generating Spread Spectrum is multiplying the data waveform by a wideband, digitally generated waveform. This is referred to as Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum. The characteristics of Spread Spectrum systems are determined by the spreading waveform. A common group of spreading waveforms, and the ones dealt with in this text, are the maximal-length sequences. These are a class of pseudorandom waveforms. Their properties include a two valued autocorrelation function with its maximum value at no code-phase offset. This allows for multiple access to a single resource and the suppression of multi-path interference as adjacent codes have little effect on each other. This same property requires that the receiver must accurately align its replica of the spreading waveform to the transmitted waveform in order to despread the received waveform and demodulate the data. Common methods of synchronisation use a two pronged solution. Firstly the correct code phase is determined. This is referred to as code acquisition. Secondly the clocking frequency of the received waveform must be resolved in order to precisely align the two sequences. This is referred to as code tracking. Receivers therefore tend to be complex and expensive. This thesis involved the investigation of two pseudo-noise synchronisation networks proposed by J .G. van de Groenendaal. These networks offered both code acquisition and tracking in a single robust loop. The investigation, done in co-operation with J..G. van de Groenendaal, persued two avenues. Firstly the loops were simulated. This method allows for the easy alteration of system parameters. Valuable insight into the loop dynamics can thus be gained. Secondly the loops were built on the bench. This allows for the practical confirmation of the results of the simulation. Both synchronisation loops were based on variations of the maximal likelihood phase detector. This phase detector is formed by taking the product of the first derivative with respect to time of the receiver's replica of the transmitted waveform and the received waveform. The initial investigation involved calculating the phase information generated by this phase discriminator for a variety of code-phase and frequency offsets. It was found that there were two stable points in the baseband Spread Spectrum search grid, a grid where a cell consists of a certain code-phase and frequency offset. These stable points existed at no frequency offset, which means that the loops should track the input frequency, and a one or no code-phase offset, which means that the loops should acquire either code-phase. A simple model where the novel synchronisation loop's conditions are represented by a 'ball' resting on the baseband Spread Spectrum search grid as expressed in terms of the integrated phase output of the maximal likelihood phase discriminator was developed. In this model the 'ball' will roll around the surface until one of the two stable points is entered. This describes quite accurately the paths the novel synchronisation loop does in fact take through the baseband Spread Spectrum search grid. The first loop is based directly on the maximal likelihood phase detector. The differentiator is thus in the feedback path of the loop. This results in the loop being unstable and parameter sensitive. Moving the differentiator into the input path, as in the second loop, resulted in a more stable loop. This loop therefore offered a complete, simple synchronisation solution. The novel synchronisation loop with the differentiator in the input path was found to operate at signal-to- noise ratios of -2 dB. Improvement of this signal-to-noise ratio does not offer any advantages in a Spread Spectrum environment as the loop needs to work in a coherent system where the radio frequency carrier must be resolved before the receiver's pseudo-noise sequence can be synchronised. A radio frequency carrier cannot be easily resolved at signal-to-noise ratios lower than O dB. The loop was further adapted to operate in the data environment. Under conditions of data modulation the received waveform is randomly inverted by the data. This results in the loop being driven out of lock. The phase discriminator's slope, having locked on a certain polarity, cannot track an input of the opposite polarity. The loop was adapted by including detection circuitry that would monitor the state of the receiver with respect to the incoming data waveform and alter the polarity of the of the discriminator's slope where necessary. During the prototyping of the loop on the bench certain implementations were investigated. These included the signed edge detector, a wideband low noise implementation of a square wave differentiator, and the synchronous oscillator, a form of injection locked oscillator. The loop was shown to achieve synchronisation. The novel synchronisation loop with the differentiator in the input path is thus capable of synchronising two maximal-length sequences in both code-phase and frequency

    Engineering evaluations and studies. Volume 3: Exhibit C

    Get PDF
    High rate multiplexes asymmetry and jitter, data-dependent amplitude variations, and transition density are discussed

    Low data rate digital space communications

    Get PDF
    The low available transmitter power and the large frequency uncertainty constrain the data rate to be low. An all-digital communication receiver is proposed, and its feasibility is established. Although coherent systems should be used whenever practical, the noncoherent MFSK system is more suitable for very low data rates. The effect of Rician fading on the performance of MFSK receiver is studied. Fading characteristics of the Venus channel are examined based on the exponential model and available experimental data on the Venus atmosphere. Because of the requirement of high communication efficiency, three codes are evaluated and compared. The rapidly varying phase error at low data rate has great effects on the tracking loop behaviors which are examined by extensive computer study of the phase plane trajectories

    Study to investigate and evaluate means of optimizing the Ku-band combined radar/communication functions for the space shuttle

    Get PDF
    The performance of the space shuttle orbiter's Ku-Band integrated radar and communications equipment is analyzed for the radar mode of operation. The block diagram of the rendezvous radar subsystem is described. Power budgets for passive target detection are calculated, based on the estimated values of system losses. Requirements for processing of radar signals in the search and track modes are examined. Time multiplexed, single-channel, angle tracking of passive scintillating targets is analyzed. Radar performance in the presence of main lobe ground clutter is considered and candidate techniques for clutter suppression are discussed. Principal system parameter drivers are examined for the case of stationkeeping at ranges comparable to target dimension. Candidate ranging waveforms for short range operation are analyzed and compared. The logarithmic error discriminant utilized for range, range rate and angle tracking is formulated and applied to the quantitative analysis of radar subsystem tracking loops

    Serially Concatenated Coded Continuous Phase Modulation for Aeronautical Telemetry

    Get PDF
    This thesis treats the development of bandwidth-efficient serially concatenated coded (SCC) continuous phase modulation (CPM) techniques for aeronautical telemetry. The concatenated code consists of an inner and an outer code, separated by an interleaver in most configurations, and is decoded using relatively simple near-optimum iterative decoding algorithms. CPM waveforms such as shaped-offset quadrature phase shift keying (SOQPSK) and pulse code modulation/frequency modulation (PCM/FM), which are currently used in military satellite and aeronautical telemetry standards, can be viewed as inner codes due to their recursive nature. For the outer codes, this thesis applies serially concatenated convolutional codes (SCCC), turbo-product codes (TPC) and repeat-accumulate codes (RAC) because of their large coding gains, high code rates, and because their decoding algorithms are readily implemented. High-rate codes are of special interest in aeronautical telemetry applications due to recent reductions in available spectrum and ever-increasing demands on data rates. This thesis evaluates the proposed coding schemes with a large set of numerical simulation results and makes a number of recommendations based on these results

    TDRSS telecommunications study. Phase 1: Final report

    Get PDF
    A parametric analysis of the telecommunications support capability of the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TDRSS) was performed. Emphasis was placed on maximizing support capability provided to the user while minimizing impact on the user spacecraft. This study evaluates the present TDRSS configuration as presented in the TDRSS Definition Phase Study Report, December 1973 to determine potential changes for improving the overall performance. In addition, it provides specifications of the user transponder equipment to be used in the TDRSS

    Efficient Bayesian-based Multi-View Deconvolution

    Full text link
    Light sheet fluorescence microscopy is able to image large specimen with high resolution by imaging the sam- ples from multiple angles. Multi-view deconvolution can significantly improve the resolution and contrast of the images, but its application has been limited due to the large size of the datasets. Here we present a Bayesian- based derivation of multi-view deconvolution that drastically improves the convergence time and provide a fast implementation utilizing graphics hardware.Comment: 48 pages, 20 figures, 1 table, under review at Nature Method

    The payload/shuttle-data-communication-link handbook

    Get PDF
    Communication links between the Orbiter, payloads, and ground are described: end-to-end, hardline, S-band, Ku-band, TDRSS relay, waveforms, premodulation, subcarrier modulation, carrier modulation, transmitter power, antennas, the RF channel, system noise, received signal-to-noise spectral density, carrier-tracking loop, carrier demodulation, subcarrier demodulation, digital data detection, digital data decoding, and tandem link considerations

    Coherent peak detection algorithms for utra first stage code acquisition

    Get PDF
    The first stage of UTRA code acquisition is the most crucial stage of the cell search process because it has to deal with the largest amount of uncertainty. We assume that the cell search starts when the mobile station is turned on with no prior information about the base station(s) that may be in the vicinity of the mobile station. The mobile station must acquire slot boundaries in order to obtain timing information of the detected base station. Therefore, this large amount of uncertainty gives longer mean acquisition time. In this thesis, we have devised four new peak detection algorithms for first stage code acquisition. We utilize the available base stations with few multipath signals along with the standard oversampling and pipelining utilization. We compare different coherent and non-coherent combining techniques and run simulations for different carrier frequency errors. We have developed simulation software using MATLAB, to simulate the performance of these algorithms. Our simulation results show that coherent combining for some of the new algorithms provide results close if not better than its non-coherent counterpart even at moderate carrier frequency errors especially at low signal to interference ratio
    corecore