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TRACKING RECEIVER NOISE BANDWIDTH SELECTIONPedroza, Moises 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 28-31, 1996 / Town and Country Hotel and Convention Center, San Diego, California / The selection of the Intermediate Frequency (IF) bandwidth filter for a data receiver for
processing PCM data is based on using a peak deviation of 0.35 times the bit rate. The
optimum IF bandwidth filter is equal to the bit rate. An IF bandwidth filter of 1.5 times the
bit rate degrades the data by approximately 0.7 dB. The selection of the IF bandwidth
filter for tracking receivers is based on the narrowest “noise bandwidth” that will yield the
best system sensitivity. In some cases the noise bandwidth of the tracking receiver is the
same as the IF bandwidth of the data receiver because it is the same receiver. If this is the
case, the PCM bit rate determines the IF bandwidth and establishes the system sensitivity.
With increasing bit rates and increased transmitter stability characteristics, the IF
bandwidth filter selection criteria for a tracking receiver must include system sensitivity
considerations. The tracking receiver IF bandwidth filter selection criteria should also be
based on the narrowest IF bandwidth that will not cause the tracking errors to be masked
by high bit rates and alter the pedestal dynamic response.
This paper describes a selection criteria for a tracking receiver IF bandwidth filter based
on measurements of the tracking error signals versus antenna pedestal dynamic response.
Different IF bandwidth filters for low and high bit rates were used.
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OPTIMIZED LOW BIT RATE PCM/FM TELEMETRY WITH WIDE IF BANDWIDTHSLaw, Eugene 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 21, 2002 / Town & Country Hotel and Conference Center, San Diego, California / This paper will present the results of some experiments with non-coherent, single symbol detection
of pulse code modulation (PCM)/frequency modulation (FM) where the receiver intermediate
frequency (IF) bandwidth is much wider than the bit rate. The experiments involved varying the
peak deviation and measuring the bit error probability (BEP) at various signal energy per bit to noise
power spectral density ratios (E(b)/N(o)). The experiments showed that the optimum peak-to-peak
deviation was about 0.7 to 0.8 times the –3 dB IF bandwidth and that the E(b)/N(o) required for a given
BEP increased as the ratio of IF bandwidth to bit rate increased. Further, bi-phase-level/FM
performed slightly better than non-return-to-zero-level (NRZ-L)/FM with an ac coupled RF signal
generator and IF bandwidths much wider than the bit rate.
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CMOS Wide Tuning Gilbert Mixer with Controllable IF Bandwidth in Upcoming RF Front End for Multi-Band Multi-Standard ApplicationsRen, Jianfeng 01 September 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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