A Statistical Description of Shipboard Environment and Emitter Signals within a 250 MHz Band at 1 GHz.

Abstract

Measurements are being taken to achieve and ensure Electromagnetic Compatibility between the shipboard Joint Tactical Information Distribution System, scheduled for introduction into the U.S. Navy in the 1990's, and existing shipboard radar, beacon and identification systems. The description of the electromagnetic environment in time and frequency is complicated by the inherent structure of the emitted signals because they are pulsed, some at irregular pulse periods, and radiated from rotating antennas. The signal level distribution is further complicated by reflections off other rotating antennas. The complex time/frequency structure of the signals and the statistical nature of the JTIDS system suggested that the signal level measurements should be statistical. The shipboard system used for the measurements presented in this paper is configured around a Hewlett-Packard 8566B spectrum analyzer/85685A preselector operating at a 3 MHz bandwidth, which is comparable to the RF bandwidth of the JTIDS signal. The transducer is a circular array of eight vertical dipoles which can be wrapped around a ship's mast. The instruments are HP-IB controlled with an HP9816 computer which also does real-time processing and transfers data to an HP9133H hard/floppy disc drive. A logging record is maintained on an HP ThinkJet printer with both alphanumeric and graphical data displayed.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Dec 01, 1987
Accession Number
ADA191769

Entities

People

  • W. R. Cronyn

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Availability
  • Bandwidth
  • Biometric Security
  • Classification
  • Dynamic Range
  • Electromagnetic Compatibility
  • Electromagnetic Environments
  • Electromagnetic Interference
  • Environment
  • Frequency
  • Identification
  • Identification Systems
  • Measurement
  • Rotating Antennas
  • Security
  • Shipboard
  • Spectrum Analyzers

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Computer Science/Computer Engineering/Data Science/Digital Signal Processing.
  • Naval Mine Countermeasure Systems Development.
  • Radar Systems Engineering.