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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A Low Cost TDRSS Compatible Transmitter Option

Whiteman, Don 10 1900 (has links)
ITC/USA 2005 Conference Proceedings / The Forty-First Annual International Telemetering Conference and Technical Exhibition / October 24-27, 2005 / Riviera Hotel & Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / The NASA Space-based Telemetry and Range Safety (STARS) program has developed and tested a low cost Ku-Band transmitter alternative for TDRSS applications based on an existing IRIG shaped offset quaternary phase shift keying (SOQPSK) transmitter. This paper presents information related to the implementation of this low cost system, as well as performance measurements of the alternative TDRSS transmitter system compared with an existing QPSK TDRSS transmitter.
2

A Study of RF/Microwave Components Using Fused Deposition Modeling and Micro-Dispensing

Stephenson, Joshua A. 23 June 2017 (has links)
The design and study of multiple RF direct digital manufactured (DDM) devices are presented in this work. A 2.45 GHz, 180°; hybrid coupler is designed to provide the space required for other system components. The coupler is designed and manufactured on a 32 mil Rogers 4003C substrate and adapted to a 100% in-fill acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) substrate. A size reduction of 66% is accomplished with a bandwidth of 16%. A DDM Ku band connector is modeled and fabricated using varying relative dielectric constants of 50% and 100% in-fill ABS. The connector maintains less than 0.45 dB of insertion loss up to 14 GHz and greater than 10dB of return loss up to 15 GHz. A lumped component model is also developed to model the damaged transition of the connector with agreement to numerical electromagnetic simulation software. Lastly, a thermal and RF study of a Ku band power amplifier (PA) is performed. Two 5 mil 100% in-fill ABS PA test fixtures are fabricated with a varying number of vias. The designs are biased at various operating points to collect thermal and RF data. The PA operates at 151°C before melting the ABS substrate. A thermal model is developed from the measurement data to predict the temperatures at given power levels with good agreement between simulation and model data.
3

DESIGN OF A MULTI-PURPOSE KU-BAND STATION

Nötzel, Klaus Ralf 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 25-28, 1999 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / Deutsche Telekom has been operating different communication satellites for several years. DLR (Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt e.V.) with its GSOC (German Space Operation Center) is responsible for German space missions. Deutsche Telekom and DLR formed a joint venture to build a Ku-Band station for back-up purposes and to provide LEOP services in the Ku-Band for Europe. The station is located at the DLR premises near Munich. The new station is operational since 1998. The aim was to design the system in a way that the operation effort in costs aspects and human intervention is minimized. All operational tasks can be performed besides the routine work of one person at the Satellite Control Center (SCC). The station is remote controlled from different SCCs. The SCC has one consistent Human Machine Interfaces which includes not only the Ku-Band station but also the backup S-Band stations at different locations. This paper describes conception and operation of a LEOP Ku-Band Station with shared users at different sites.
4

Ku-Band Ultra-High Resolution Radar Tomography of an Alpine Snowpack

Bartley, Ryan Natale 07 April 2020 (has links)
A commercial-off-the-shelf Ku-band Frequency Modulated Continuous Wave (FMCW) synthetic aperture radar (SAR) system is coupled with a custom built two-dimensional scanning system. This system is installed in an alpine environment and pointed at a snow-unstable mountain slope for the duration of a Utah winter. The radar scanning system, designed to be capable of mapping a snowpack and its layers, is employed to create a series of three-dimensional images from a remote location. Individual images demonstrate the ability to directly detect snow layers, Furthermore, successive images are compared to track volume magnitude and phase values over the course of winter, including many snow deposition and melt events. The digital signal processing techniques used to create a high-resolution voxel (a three-dimensional pixel) map describing these snow layers is discussed. Results are discussed and further work is suggested for improving upon the results of this work.
5

Analog Signal Processor for Adaptive Antenna Arrays

Hossu, Mircea January 2007 (has links)
An analog circuit for beamforming in a mobile Ku band satellite TV antenna array has been implemented. The circuit performs continuous-time gradient descent using simultaneous perturbation gradient estimation. Simulations were performed using Agilent ADS circuit simulator. Field tests were performed in a realistic scenario using a satellite signal. The results were comparable to the simulation predictions and to results obtained using a digital implementation of a similar stochastic approximation algorithm.
6

Analog Signal Processor for Adaptive Antenna Arrays

Hossu, Mircea January 2007 (has links)
An analog circuit for beamforming in a mobile Ku band satellite TV antenna array has been implemented. The circuit performs continuous-time gradient descent using simultaneous perturbation gradient estimation. Simulations were performed using Agilent ADS circuit simulator. Field tests were performed in a realistic scenario using a satellite signal. The results were comparable to the simulation predictions and to results obtained using a digital implementation of a similar stochastic approximation algorithm.
7

Techniques de conception d'oscillateurs contrôlés en tension à très faible bruit de phase en bande Ku intégrés sur silicium en technologie BiCMOS / Design techniques of Ku-band fully integrated Voltage Controlled Oscillators for very low phase noise on silicon in 0.25 µm BiCMOS technology

Hyvert, Jérémy 22 September 2016 (has links)
L'objectif de cette thèse est de démontrer la faisabilité d'oscillateurs contrôlés en tension (O.C.T.) rivalisant en termes de bruit de phase avec les O.C.T. fabriqués en technologies III V. Cet O.C.T. doit être complètement intégré, adresser la bande Ku et utiliser la technologie QUBiC4X de NXP Semiconductors. Les travaux de cette thèse sont articulés autour de trois chapitres principaux, le premier revient sur les bases fondamentales à la compréhension des phénomènes inhérents aux composants électroniques et présents dans les oscillateurs plus particulièrement. Le second explique, en s'appuyant sur l'analyse des formes d'ondes et sur des calculs analytiques, les choix retenus en termes d'architecture pour la partie active ainsi que pour le résonateur afin de minimiser la conversion du bruit AM/PM et atteindre les meilleures performances possibles en bruit de phase. Il décrit les quatre versions d'O.C.T. réalisés et analyse les résultats de simulations post-layout obtenus pour justifier leur fabrication. Il présente notamment une architecture innovante utilisant les avantages d'un montage cascode ainsi qu'un résonateur à trois inductances différentielles imbriquées les unes dans les autres. Le troisième chapitre détaille les choix de design faits lors du dessin des masques ainsi que les résultats de mesures obtenus pour les quatre versions fabriquées. Enfin, il se termine par une énumération des recherches menées dans le but d'expliquer les différences observées entre les résultats de mesure et de simulation. / The thesis goal is to demonstrate the feasibility of voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) challenging the VCOs using III-V technologies regarding phase noise performances. This VCO must be fully integrated, target the Ku-band and use the QUBiC4X process from NXP Semiconductors. This thesis work is based on three main chapters, the first one reviews the fundamentals to understand the intrinsic phenomena in electronics components and more particularly in oscillators. The second explains, by using the waveforms analysis and analytical demonstrations, the choices made regarding both the active part and the resonator architecture in order to minimize the AM/PM noise conversion and then to reach the best phase noise performances. It describes the four versions of the realized VCOs and analyzes the post-layout simulations results to justify their fabrications. It shows more specifically an innovative architecture using the advantages of a cascode configuration and a resonator based on three interlocked differential inductors. Finally, the third chapter focuses on the masks' layout and measurements results of the four VCOs. It also details the investigations made to explain the differences between measurements and simulations.
8

Implementation of Dual-Polarization on an Airborne Scatterometer and Preliminary Data Quality

Dvorsky, Jason 01 January 2012 (has links) (PDF)
The Imaging Wind and RAin Profiler (IWRAP) is an airborne scatterometer system built and operated by University of Massachusetts Amherst's Microwave Remote Sensing Laboratory (MIRSL). The radar is seasonally deployed aboard one of the two National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) WP-3D Orion ``Hurricane Hunter'' aircraft based out of MacDill AFB in Tampa, Florida. IWRAP is a dual-frequency, Ku- and C-band, scatterometer that uses two conically scanning antennas to estimate the ocean surface wind vectors as well as intervening rain profiles. Data that is gathered with IWRAP is used to improve current Geophysical Model Functions (GMF) or to help derive new GMFs for other undocumented incidence angles. This thesis outlines the improvements and changes made to the IWRAP system from 2009-2011. Chapter Two describes the IWRAP instrument including a description of the instrument status as of Fall 2009, and a summary of instrument operations in 2010 and 2011. Chapter Three describes hardware and software modifications to support dual-polarization. It also describes hardware-based and flight-based attempts to observe at large incidence angles. Chapter Four is an analysis of the stability of the internal calibration both during flights and over a season. System documentation is consolidated into a single technical manual in Appendix A.
9

A Novel Unit Cell Antenna for Highly Integrated Phased Arrays in the SHF Band

Ogilvie, Timothy Bryan 01 June 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Phased arrays are electromagnetic antenna systems comprised of many radiating elements and processing electronics. Radiating elements are typically positioned in an orderly grid within the antenna aperture. In the receive mode of operation, radiating elements capture some of the signal energy from incoming radiation and guide these signals to processing electronics. Signals are filtered and amplified to maintain the desired sensitivity and complexly weighted using circuits with reconfigurable amplification gain and phase delay. Finally, all signals are combined. The summation of these complexly weighted spatial samples forms a spatial filter in the same way complexly weighted temporal samples establish a temporal filter in a finite impulse response discrete-time filter. Therefore, a phased array behaves like a spatial filter that strongly favors signals arriving from a specific direction. This favored direction represents the look angle of its beam, and the shape of the beam directly relates to the complex weights applied to the signals in the array. Analogous to the flexibility offered by digital filters, phased arrays enable agile beam steering, sidelobe control, and multiple independent beams. These capabilities have revolutionized radar, radioastronomy, and communication systems. Phased arrays have increasingly employed printed circuit board (PCB) fabrication techniques and processes to maximize array channel density, achieve lower profile, and minimize component integration cost. A few applications which leverage these qualities include low-cost radar, mobile satellite communication (SATCOM), and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR). Further, PCB-based arrays readily accommodate advancements in highly integrated beamforming radio frequency integrated circuits (RFICs), multi-chip modules, and RF micro-electro-mechanical system (MEMS) device technologies. On a prior effort, an integrated unit cell design was developed for a PCB-based SATCOM array application. However, the design failed to meet the requirements. The primary objective of this work is to demonstrate an improved design using systematic microwave design techniques and modern analysis tools to meet the requirements for the same application. The proposed design must improve gain, bandwidth, size, and manufacturability over the prior design. Additionally, the design must be generally extensible to phased array implementations across the SHF band (3-30 GHz). This work discusses the advantages of phased arrays over continuous apertures (e.g. reflectors), reviews phased array theory, and proposes an improved unit cell design. The proposed design is 35% smaller than a dime and consists of an orthogonally-fed, slot-coupled stacked patch antenna and dual-stage branchline coupler implemented in a multilayer PCB. Within the operating band from 10.7 to 14.5 GHz, the design achieves an average return loss of 15 dB, a uniform radiation pattern with peak realized gain of 4.8 to 7.0 dBic, cross-polarization level below -17 dB, and stable performance in a closely-spaced array. When configured in an array, the design supports X/Ku-band SATCOM in full-duplex operation, electronically rotatable polarization, and a 47.5˚ grating lobe free conical scan range. Further, a Monte Carlo analysis proves the design accommodates tolerances of material properties and manufacturing processes, overcoming a major challenge in PCB-based high frequency antenna design.
10

Contribution à la conception d'un récepteur mobile failble coût et faible consommation dans la bande Ku pour le standard DVB-S / Contribution to the design of a low power and low cost 12-GHz receiver for DVB-S applications

Fouque, Andrée 04 June 2012 (has links)
Cette thèse présente une étude de faisabilité d'un récepteur faible coût et faible consommation pour l'extension du standard DVS-S à la mobilité. L'objectif de ce projet est de proposer de solutions pour lever les verrous technologiques quant à la réalisation d'un tel système en technologie CMOS 65 nm. Ce manuscrit de thèse articulé autour de quatre chapitres décrit toutes les étapes depuis la définition des spécifications du réseau d'antennes et de la chaîne de réception jusqu'à la présentation de leurs performances, en passant par l'étude de leurs architectures et de la conception des différents blocs. Suite à l'étude au niveau système et au bilan de liaison, le démonstrateur envisagé est constitué d'un réseau d'antennes (huit sous-réseaux de huit antennes microruban) suivi de la mise en parallèle de huit chemins unitaires pour satisfaire les exigences (Gain, facteur de bruit, rapport signal-à-bruit...) de l'application visée. Ce travail a abouti à la démonstration de la faisabilité d'une architecture innovante. Par ailleurs, nous avons aussi démontré sa non-application pour le standard DVB-S en raison des limitations en bruit de la technologie CMOS. Cependant des pistes existent pour améliorer le rapport signal-à-bruit du démonstrateur, à savoir l'utilisation d'un LNA (Low Noise Amplifier) avec une technologie compétitive en bruit et/ou d'un traitement du signal après la démodulation en bande par un processeur analogique. / This work focuses on the faisability of a low cost and low power receiver in order to extend the DVB-S standard to mobility. The objective of this project is to suggest solutions to overcome technological bottlenecks fot the realization of such a demonstrator with 65 nm CMOS technology. This report composed of four chapters, describes all steps from the specification definition to the performances of the antenna array and the receiver through the architecture study and the different blocks design. [...]

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