Filtering Effects in a Spread-Spectrum Telemetry System

International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / September 15-17, 1969 / Sheraton Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. === Binary antipodal direct-sequence biphase modulation is employed (for the purpose of interference reduction) over a channel disturbed by white noise and an "external" cohere...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Harman, W. H.
Other Authors: TRW Systems Group
Language:en_US
Published: International Foundation for Telemetering 1969
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/606719
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/606719
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Summary:International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / September 15-17, 1969 / Sheraton Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. === Binary antipodal direct-sequence biphase modulation is employed (for the purpose of interference reduction) over a channel disturbed by white noise and an "external" coherent sinusoidal interference. Before these are added, the signal suffers distortion in the form of linear filtering whose effects are to be determined. The receiver is a coherent "rematched filter" (matched to the distorted signal). The mean and variance of the detection variable are expressed as an output SNR (signal to noise ratio). The variance is the sum of three components: due to noise, external interference, and self interference. Concise formulas for the first two contributions are developed. The third is approximated and found to be quite small in many cases of interest. Results are applied in the case in which the filter has a bandpass characteristic and external interference is dominant. With fixed signal power entering the filter, there is an optimal chip rate above which filter distortion effects increase faster than process gain; the optimal chip rate is approximately equal to the filter noise bandwidth B (Hertz). For an ideal bandpass filter and a single pole bandpass filter, the optimal chip rates are 1.0B and 0.95B, respectively.