High Frequency Direct Drive Generation Using White Noise Sources

Abstract

Damped sinusoid direct drive injection on interconnecting cable bundles between subsystems has long been used as a technique for determining susceptibility to electromagnetic transients in military weapon systems. Questions arise, however, about the adequacy of this method of individually injected, single sinusoids in assuring subsystem strength against broad band threats. This issue has recently been raised in the latest revision of MIL-STD- 461 that requires subsystems exhibit no malfunctions when subjected to a repetitive square wave pulse with fast rise and fall time (CS115). An extension to this approach would be to test subsystems using arbitrary waveforms. In recent years arbitrary waveform generators (AWGs) have been used to duplicate, with a high degree of fidelity, the waveforms measured on cable bundles in a system illuminated by fields in a system-level EMP simulator. However, the operating speeds of present AWGs do not allow the extension of this approach to meet new threats such as MIL-STD-2169A. A novel alternative approach for generation of the required signals, being developed in a cooperative effort between the Naval Air Warfare Center and Phillips Laboratory, is the use of white noise signals conditioned in such a manner to produce the desired direct drive waveforms.

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 1994
Accession Number
ADA284158

Entities

People

  • D. Lawry
  • G. Hoffer
  • K. Sebacher
  • Sean Frazier
  • W. Prather

Organizations

  • Naval Air Warfare Center

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Air Platforms
  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Weapons Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Aircrafts
  • Amplifiers
  • Amplitude Modulation
  • Bandwidth
  • Broadband
  • Frequency
  • Frequency Bands
  • Frequency Domain
  • Generators
  • Measurement
  • Modulation
  • Pulse Amplifiers
  • Pulse Modulation
  • Square Waves
  • Waveform Generators
  • Waveforms
  • White Noise

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Electrical Engineering
  • Optical Fiber Sensing and Electromagnetic Propagation.
  • Systems Analysis and Design