Radio Signals with Large Relative Bandwidth for Over-the-Horizon Radar and Spread-Spectrum Communications
- 1 November 1978
- journal article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in IEEE Transactions on Electromagnetic Compatibility
- Vol. EMC-20 (4) , 501-512
- https://doi.org/10.1109/temc.1978.303630
Abstract
It is known that radio signals must have a small relative frequency bandwidth if structures and circuits resonating with sinusoidal functions are to be used for radiation and reception. This paper develops concepts showing that a small relative frequency bandwidth is also required for the use of amplitude or frequency modulation of sinusoidal radio carriers in the usual form. However, it is easy to modify the usual methods of amplitude and frequency modulation for signals with large relative frequency bandwidth. The primary application of such methods is for over-the-horizon radar and spread-spectrum communications in the short-wave region where the desired relative frequency bandwidths are neither small (in the order of 0.01 or less) nor close to 1.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Synthetic-Aperture Radar Based on Nonsinusoidal Functions: II-Pulse Compression, Contrast, Resolution, and Doppler ShiftIEEE Transactions on Electromagnetic Compatibility, 1979
- Synthetic-Aperture Radar Based on Nonsinusoidal Functions: I-Moving Radar and Stationary Arrays in One or Two DimensionsIEEE Transactions on Electromagnetic Compatibility, 1978
- Frequency-Sharing and Spread-Spectrum Transmission with Large Relative BandwidthIEEE Transactions on Electromagnetic Compatibility, 1978
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