High Frequency (HF) radio signal amplitude characteristics, HF receiver site performance criteria, and expanding the dynamic range of HF digital new energy receivers by strong signal elimination [electronic resource]

Approved for public release; distribution unlimited. === The dissertation discusses High Frequency (HF) radio sources. It consolidates data from all available, published HF spectrum surveys. The author conducted a new HF survey using detection of new energy events. The first cumulative probability d...

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Main Author: Lott, Gus K., Jr.
Other Authors: Jauregui, Stephen
Published: Monterey, California: Naval Postgraduate School 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/34806
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-348062015-01-26T15:55:44Z High Frequency (HF) radio signal amplitude characteristics, HF receiver site performance criteria, and expanding the dynamic range of HF digital new energy receivers by strong signal elimination [electronic resource] Lott, Gus K., Jr. Jauregui, Stephen Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.) Electrical Engineering Approved for public release; distribution unlimited. The dissertation discusses High Frequency (HF) radio sources. It consolidates data from all available, published HF spectrum surveys. The author conducted a new HF survey using detection of new energy events. The first cumulative probability distribution function for the amplitude of detected non-broadcast HF signals is developed, and the distribution is log-normal. HF receiver site performance quantification is possible using the HF signal distributions. Site performance degradation results from noise, interference, and signal path attenuation. Noise examples are presented in a 3-D format of time, frequency, and amplitude. Graphs are presented that allow estimation of the percentage of HF non-broadcast signals lost as a function of noise and interference levels. Limitations of HF search receivers using analog-to-digital converters as the receiver front-end are discussed. Derived bounds on AD converter performance show that today's digital technology does not provide enough dynamic range, sensitivity, or sampling rate. Alternative dynamic range extension methods are examined. A new method of dynamic range extension by removing the strongest signals present is presented. Greater receiver sensitivity results from changing the HF signal environment seen by the AD converter. The new method uses a phase-tracking network and signal reconstruction techniques. 2013-08-01T21:15:10Z 2013-08-01T21:15:10Z 1990-06 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/34806 ocn698386735 NPS62-90-006 Approved for public release; distribution unlimited. This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. As such, it is in the public domain, and under the provisions of Title 17, United States Code, Section 105, it may not be copyrighted. Monterey, California: Naval Postgraduate School
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sources NDLTD
description Approved for public release; distribution unlimited. === The dissertation discusses High Frequency (HF) radio sources. It consolidates data from all available, published HF spectrum surveys. The author conducted a new HF survey using detection of new energy events. The first cumulative probability distribution function for the amplitude of detected non-broadcast HF signals is developed, and the distribution is log-normal. HF receiver site performance quantification is possible using the HF signal distributions. Site performance degradation results from noise, interference, and signal path attenuation. Noise examples are presented in a 3-D format of time, frequency, and amplitude. Graphs are presented that allow estimation of the percentage of HF non-broadcast signals lost as a function of noise and interference levels. Limitations of HF search receivers using analog-to-digital converters as the receiver front-end are discussed. Derived bounds on AD converter performance show that today's digital technology does not provide enough dynamic range, sensitivity, or sampling rate. Alternative dynamic range extension methods are examined. A new method of dynamic range extension by removing the strongest signals present is presented. Greater receiver sensitivity results from changing the HF signal environment seen by the AD converter. The new method uses a phase-tracking network and signal reconstruction techniques.
author2 Jauregui, Stephen
author_facet Jauregui, Stephen
Lott, Gus K., Jr.
author Lott, Gus K., Jr.
spellingShingle Lott, Gus K., Jr.
High Frequency (HF) radio signal amplitude characteristics, HF receiver site performance criteria, and expanding the dynamic range of HF digital new energy receivers by strong signal elimination [electronic resource]
author_sort Lott, Gus K., Jr.
title High Frequency (HF) radio signal amplitude characteristics, HF receiver site performance criteria, and expanding the dynamic range of HF digital new energy receivers by strong signal elimination [electronic resource]
title_short High Frequency (HF) radio signal amplitude characteristics, HF receiver site performance criteria, and expanding the dynamic range of HF digital new energy receivers by strong signal elimination [electronic resource]
title_full High Frequency (HF) radio signal amplitude characteristics, HF receiver site performance criteria, and expanding the dynamic range of HF digital new energy receivers by strong signal elimination [electronic resource]
title_fullStr High Frequency (HF) radio signal amplitude characteristics, HF receiver site performance criteria, and expanding the dynamic range of HF digital new energy receivers by strong signal elimination [electronic resource]
title_full_unstemmed High Frequency (HF) radio signal amplitude characteristics, HF receiver site performance criteria, and expanding the dynamic range of HF digital new energy receivers by strong signal elimination [electronic resource]
title_sort high frequency (hf) radio signal amplitude characteristics, hf receiver site performance criteria, and expanding the dynamic range of hf digital new energy receivers by strong signal elimination [electronic resource]
publisher Monterey, California: Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/34806
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