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FQPSK Doubles Spectral Efficiency of Telemetry: Advances and Initial Air to Ground Flight TestsFeher, Kamilo 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 26-29, 1998 / Town & Country Resort Hotel and Convention Center, San Diego, California / FQPSK is the abbreviation for Feher Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (FQPSK)
patented systems [1]. Digcom, Inc. licensed FQPSK products demonstrated significant
spectral saving and RF power efficient robust BER performance advantages. These bit
rate agile modems and Non Linearly Amplified (NLA) transceivers, DSP and hardware
implementations, and in some instances “software-radios” (20kb/s to more than 100Mb/s)
and RF frequency agile (from 150MHz to more than 40GHz) developments and systems
have recently been demonstrated and deployed. The spectral efficiency, i.e., data
throughput capability of the 1st generation of FQPSK, as demonstrated in initial Advanced
Range Telemetry (ARTM) flight tests, approximately doubles while 2nd generation
“FQPSK-2” systems have the potential to quadruple the spectral efficiency of operational
PCM/FM telemetry systems and be backward compatible with the 1st generation of
FQPSK technologies. It is also demonstrated that the spectral efficiency advantage of
FQPSK over that of NLA power efficient GMSK, OQPSK and QPSK modulated
transceivers is in the 50% to 300% range and that the potential spectral efficiency
advantage of FQPSK-2 over GMSK [1] is in the 200% to 500% range.
Based on extensive multi-year studies of alternative solutions for spectral and RF
power efficient, robust BER performance systems, several commercial US and
international organizations, AIAA, CCSDS, NASA, ESA, CCSDS and various programs
of the US Department of Defense (DoD) concluded that FQPSK offers the most
spectrally efficient high performance-high speed proven technology solutions and
recommended FQPSK standardization for several data links. Initial DoD-ARTM Program
Office Air-to-Ground L-band and S-band jet airborne telemetry Test and Evaluation
(T&E) data, obtained during the summer of 1998 are briefly highlighted. These include
simultaneosly tested FQPSK and PCM/FM. In these tests the following ARTM objectives
have been demonstrated: (a) FQPSK approximately doubles the spectral efficiency of
currently operational PCM/FM; (b) The Data Link Performance of these two systems is
comparable. The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) draft
modulation standard recommended to the DoD, NASA and CCSDS, was approved by
the AIAA [23]. The AIAA standard recommends “that FQPSK modulation be
immediately adopted as the interim increment–1 standard.”
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NONCOHERENT AND DIFFERENTIAL DETECTION OF FQPSK WITH MAXIMUM-LIKELIHOOD SEQUENCE ESTIMATION IN NONLINEAR CHANNELSLin, Jin-Son, Feher, Kamilo 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 21, 2002 / Town & Country Hotel and Conference Center, San Diego, California / This paper presents noncoherent limiter-discriminator detection and differential detection of FQPSK
(Feher quadrature phase-shift-keying) with maximum-likelihood sequence estimation (MLSE)
techniques. Noncoherent FQPSK systems are suitable for fast fading and cochannel interference
channels and channels with strong phase noise, and they can offer faster synchronization and reduce
outage events compared with conventional coherent systems. In this paper, both differential detection
and limiter-discriminator detection of FQPSK are discussed. We use MLSE with lookup tables to
exploit the memory in noncoherently detected FQPSK signals and thus significantly improve the bit
error rate (BER) performance in an additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel.
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The design of a high speed topology for a QPSK demodulator with emphasis on the synchronization algorithms needed for demodulationBooysen, Samuel 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MScEng (Electrical and Electronic Engineering))--University of Stellenbosch, 2010. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This thesis describes the design and implementation of a software based QPSK demodulator
with a demodulation speed of 100 Mbps. The objective of the thesis was to identify a topology
for the QPSK demodulator that would allow for high data rates and the design of the synchronization
algorithms for carrier and symbol recovery. The QPSK demodulator was implemented
on an Altera Stratix II field programmable gate array (FPGA), which does complex I and Q sampling
on a down converted 720 MHz QPSK signal. The I and Q down converted baseband
signals are sent through matched filters which are implemented with discrete components to
maximize the signal to noise ratio of the received rectangular baseband pulses. A 1 GSPS direct
digital synthesizer (DDS) is used to generate the synchronous clock for the analog to digital
converters which samples the matched filter outputs. The demodulator uses two samples per
symbol to demodulate the QPSK signal. A dual locking system is implemented to have a wide
pre-locking filter for symbol synchronization and a narrow band post-lock filter to minimize the
loop noise. A symbol lock detection algorithm decides when the symbol recovery loop is locked
and switches between the loop filters.
A second 1 GSPS DDS output is mixed with a local oscillator to generate the 1.44 GHz LO signal
for the quadrature down conversion. The carrier recovery loop uses a numerically controlled oscillator
inside the FPGA for initial carrier acquisition which allows for very wide locking bandwidth.
After lock is achieved, the external carrier recovery loop takes over and removes any
frequency offset in the complex baseband signal by changing the frequency of the DDS. A QPSK
modulator was also developed to provide a QPSK signal with known data. The modulator can
generate any constellation diagram up to 256 points. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie tesis bespreek die ontwerp en implementasie van ’n sagteware gebaseerde QPSK demodulator
met ’n demodulasie spoed van 100 Mbps. Die doelstelling is om ’n topologie te identifiseer
vir ’n QPSK demodulator wat ’n hoë datatempo sal toelaat en ook om sinkronisasie algoritmes
te ontwikkel vir draer en simbool herkenning.
Die QPSK demodulator is geïmplimenteer op ’n Stratix II FPGA van Altera wat kompleks basisband
monstering doen op infase en kwadratuur basisband seine. Die basisband seine word
gegenereer van ’n 720 MHz QPSK sein met ’n kwadratuur menger wiese uittrees deur puls
passende filters gestuur word om die sein tot ruis verhouding te maksimeer. ’n Een gigamonster
per sekonde direk digitale sintetiseerder (DDS) is gebruik om die klok vir die analoog na digitaal
omsetters te genereer vir sinkrone monstering van die pulse passende filter uittrees. Die demodulator
gebruik twee monsters per simbool om ’n QPSK sein te demoduleer. ’n Tweevoudige sluit
algoritme word gebruik vir die simbool sinkronisasie waar ’n wyeband filter die inisiële sluit
funksie verrig en dan word daar oorgeslaan na ’n nouband filter vir fase volging wat die ruis
in die terugvoerlus verminder. Daar is ’n simbool sluit detektor wat identifiseer wanneer die
simbool beheerlus gesluit is en selekteer dan die gepaste filter.
’n Tweede DDS en ’n sintetiseerder se uittrees word gemeng om ’n 1.44 GHz draer te genereer
vir kohurente frekwensie translasie in die kwadratuur menger. Die draer sinkronisasie gebruik
’n numeries beheerbare ossilator vir die inisiële frekwensie en fase sluit wat baie vinnig geimplenteer
kan word omdat dit alles in sagteware binne in die FPGA gebeur. Na die interne draer
beheerlus gesluit is, neem die eksterne beheerlus oor om enige fase of frekwensie afsette in die
kompleks basisband seine van die kwadratuur menger te verwyder deur die frekwensie van
die draer DDS te beheer. ’n QPSK modulator is ook ontwikkel om verwysings data te genereer.
Enige konstelasie vorm tot 256 punte kan geimplementeer word.
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Contribution to the analysis of optical transmission systems using QPSK modulation / Contribution à l'étude des systèmes de transmission optique utilisant le format de modulation QPSKRamantanis, Petros 30 September 2011 (has links)
La demande constante de capacité et la saturation prévue de la fibre monomode ont conduit récemment à des avances technologiques qui ont complètement changé le paysage des télécommunications à fibre optique. Le progrès le plus important était la mise en œuvre d'une détection cohérente à l'aide d'électronique rapide. Cela a permis pas seulement l'utilisation de formats de modulation qui promettent une utilisation plus efficace de la bande passante, mais aussi l’utilisation des algorithmes adaptés pour combattre la dégradation du signal optique due à la propagation. Cette thèse a commencé un peu après le début de cette « ère du cohérent » et son principal objectif était de revoir les effets physiques de la propagation dans des systèmes de transmission terrestres, utilisant le format de modulation QPSK (Quadrature Phase Shift Keying). Le manuscrit est divisé en deux parties. La première partie est consacrée à une étude sur les séquences des données qui doivent être utilisés dans les simulations numériques, lorsqu’un format de modulation avancée est impliqué. La propagation, et en particulier l'interaction entre la dispersion chromatique et les non-linéarités, introduisent une interférence inter-symbole (ISI). Vu que cet ISI dépend de l’enchainement des données transmises, il est évident que le choix de la séquence a une influence sur la qualité estimée du canal. Etant donné que des séquences aléatoires infinies ne sont pas pratiquement réalisables, nous utilisons souvent des séquences « pseudo-aléatoires » (PR), i.e. des séquences déterministes de longueur finie, avec des statistiques équilibrés, qui semblent être aléatoires. Dans la première partie, nous décrivons la méthode de génération de séquences PR avec M. niveaux (M> 2) et nous détaillons leurs propriétés. En outre, nous proposons des outils numériques pour caractériser les séquences non pseudo-aléatoires qu’on utilise souvent dans des simulations, ou parfois aussi dans des expériences au laboratoire. Enfin, nous présentons les résultats de simulations qui permettent de quantifier la nécessité d'utiliser des séquences PR en fonction des paramètres du système. Après avoir établi les séquences finies "les plus adaptées", dans la seconde partie du manuscrit, nous nous concentrons sur l'étude de la propagation, dans le contexte d'un système de transmission QPSK et en supposant une gestion de dispersion et un type de fibre variables. Plus précisément, nous étudions numériquement les statistiques de signaux dégradés dus à l'interaction de la dispersion chromatique avec les effets non linéaires, en négligeant tout effet de polarisation ou inter-canaux, aussi que le bruit des amplificateurs. Dans ce contexte, nous étions intéressés à déterminer si certaines lois empiriques développées pour les systèmes OOK, sont valable dans le cas d'une modulation QPSK, tels que le critère de la phase non-linéaire cumulée (ΦNL) ou des lois qui permettent une optimisation de la gestion de dispersion. Ensuite, nous révélons l'importance de la rotation de la constellation du signal initial, comme un paramètre qui peut fournir des informations pour la post-optimisation de notre système. Nous discutons également autour du fait que la forme de la constellation dépend de la gestion de dispersion et concernant les constellations nous concluons qu'il y en a généralement 3 types, avec: (1) une variance de phase supérieure à la variance d'amplitude (2) une variance d'amplitude supérieure à la variance de phase et (3) avec le signal ayant une constellation qui ressemble à la constellation d’un signal sous l'influence d'un bruit blanc gaussien additif. Enfin, nous fournissons une explication phénoménologique des formes des constellations révélant le fait que des sous-séquences différentes conduisent à un « type » différent de dégradation et nous utilisons ces informations pour définir un paramètre qui quantifie le bénéfice potentiel d'un algorithme de correction du type MAP(Maximum A Posteriori Probability) / The constant demand for capacity increase, together with the foreseen saturation of the single-mode optical fiber, paved the way to technological breakthroughs that have completely changed the landscape of fiber-optic telecommunications. The most important advance was, undeniably, the practical implementation of a coherent detection with the help of high-speed electronics. This has, first, enabled the use of advanced modulation formats that allowed for a more efficient use of the fiber bandwidth, compared to the classical On-Off Keying, while adapted algorithms could not be used in order to mitigate the optical signal degradation. This thesis began a little after the advent of coherent detection and its main objective was to revisit the propagation effects in optical transmission systems using "Quadrature phase shift keying" (QPSK) modulation in the context of terrestrial systems, i.e. for transmission distances of up to about 2000 km. The manuscript is divided into two parts. The first part is dedicated to a study on the data sequences that need to be used in numerical simulations, when advanced modulation is involved. Fiber propagation, and in particular the interplay between chromatic dispersion and nonlinearities, usually introduce a nonlinear inter-symbol interference (ISI) to the transmitted signal. Since this ISI depends on the actual transmitted data pattern, it is obvious that the choice of the sequence used in our numerical simulations will have a direct influence on the estimated channel quality. Since, an infinite length, random sequence is impractical; we very commonly use pseudorandom" (PR) sequences, i.e. finite-length, deterministic sequences with balanced pattern statistics that seem to be random. In the first part we describe the method of generating M-level (with M>2) pseudorandom sequences and we detail their properties. In addition, we propose numerical tools to characterize the non-pseudorandom sequences that we use in numerical simulations, or we are sometimes forced to use in laboratory experiments. Finally, we present results of numerical simulations that quantify the necessity to use PR sequences as a function of our system parameters. After having established the “fairest possible” finite sequences, in the second part of the manuscript, we focus on the study of the nonlinear propagation, in the context of a transmission system using QPSK modulation and assuming a variable dispersion management and fiber type. Specifically, we numerically study the signal statistics due to the interplay of chromatic dispersion and nonlinear effects, neglecting all polarization or multi-wavelength effects and the amplifier noise. In this context, we were first interested in determining whether some empirical laws developed for OOK systems, can be also used in the case of QPSK modulation, such as the criterion of cumulative nonlinear phase (ΦNL) or laws that allow for a quick optimization of the dispersion management. Next we reveal the importance of a global phase rotation added to the initial signal constellation, as a parameter that can provide interesting information for the post-optimization of our system. We also discuss the fact that the constellation shape critically depends on the applied dispersion management, while there are generally 3 types of constellations, concerning the complex signal statistics: (1) the phase variance is higher than the amplitude variance (2) the amplitude variance is higher than the phase variance and (3) the received signal constellation resembles to a constellation of a signal under the influence of just an Additive White Gaussian Noise. Finally, we provide a phenomenological explanation of the constellations shapes revealing the fact that different data sub-sequences suffer from a different kind of signal degradation, while we also use this information to define a parameter that quantifies the potential benefit from a MAP (Maximum A Posteriori probability) correction algorithm
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All-optical Regeneration For Phase-shift Keyed Optical Communication SystemsCroussore, Kevin 01 January 2007 (has links)
All-optical signal processing techniques for phase-shift keyed (PSK) systems were developed theoretically and demonstrated experimentally. Nonlinear optical effects in fibers, in particular four-wave mixing (FWM) that occurs via the ultra-fast Kerr nonlinearity, offer a flexible framework within which numerous signal processing functions can be accomplished. This research has focused on the regenerative capabilities of various FWM configurations in the context of processing PSK signals. Phase-preserving amplitude regeneration, phase regeneration, and phase-regenerative wavelength conversion are analyzed and demonstrated experimentally. The single-pump phase-conjugation process was used to regenerate RZ-DPSK pulse amplitudes with different input noise distributions, and the impact on output phase characteristics was studied. Experiments revealed a limited range over which amplitude noise could effectively be suppressed without introduction of phase noise, particularly for signals with intensity pattern effects. Phase regeneration requires use of phase-sensitive amplification (PSA), which occurs in nonlinear interferometers when the pump and signal frequencies are degenerate (NI-PSA), or in fiber directly through single-stage (degenerate) or cascaded (non-degenerate) FWM processes. A PSA based on a Sagnac interferometer provided the first experimental demonstration of DPSK phase and amplitude regeneration. The phase-regenerative capabilities of the NI-PSA are limited in practice by intrinsic noise conversion (amplitude to phase noise) and to a lesser extent by the requirement to modulate the pump wave to suppress stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS). These limitations are relaxed in novel materials with higher SBS thresholds and nonlinearities. Degenerate FWM provides PSA in a traveling-wave configuration that intrinsically suppresses the noise conversion affecting the NI-PSA, while providing stronger phase-matched gain. Experiments confirmed superior phase-regenerative behavior to the NI-PSA with simultaneous reduction of amplitude noise for NRZ-DPSK signals. Phase-regenerative wavelength conversion (PR-WC) provides the regenerative properties of PSA at a new wavelength, and was proposed and demonstrated for the first time in this research. The parallel implementation of two FWM processes, phase-conjugation and frequency conversion, provides two idlers which exhibit interesting and useful regenerative properties. These were investigated theoretically and experimentally. Ideal phase-regenerative behavior is predicted when the contributing FWM processes are equally phase-matched, which can be maintained over any interaction length or wavelength shift provided the pump powers are properly adjusted. Depleted-pump regime PR-WC provides simultaneous phase and amplitude regeneration. Experiments confirmed regenerative behavior for wavelength shifts of the idlers up to 5 nm. Two techniques for phase regeneration of 4-level PSK signals were developed and evaluated. The first is based on parallel operation of PSAs suitable for processing 2-level PSK signals, where phase projection and regeneration are combined to recover the input data. Analysis of this scheme outlined the conditions required for effective phase regeneration and for practical implementation using known PSAs. A novel process based on FWM (parallel phase-conjugation followed by PSA) was developed and analyzed, and demonstrated using numerical simulations. These studies provide a basis for further work in this area.
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QUADRATURE PHASE SHIFT KEYING-DIRECT SEQUENCE SPREAD SPECTRUM-CODE DIVISION MULTIPLE ACCESS WITH DISPARATE QUADRATURE CHIP AND DATA RATESAgarwal, Shweta S. 14 April 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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SPECTRAL EFFICIENCY OF COMMERCIAL WIRELESS AND TELEMETRY SYSTEMS IS DOUBLED WITH IRIG 106-00 STANDARDIZED FQPSK AND IS QUADRUPLED WITH FQAMFeher, Kamilo 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 23-26, 2000 / Town & Country Hotel and Conference Center, San Diego, California / Advances in spectrally efficient Feher’s Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (FQPSK) and Feher‘s
Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (FQAM) patented technologies, commercial and government
“dual-use” FQPSK products and Test & Evaluation (T&E) results are highlighted in this overview
paper. US and international customer requirements/systems, programs and recent deployments and
standardization programs are also described. FQPSK doubles the spectral efficiency of PCM/FM
Telemetry and of Feher patented Gaussian Minimum Shift Keying (GMSK or FGMSK) and of
alternatives, while FQAM quadruples the spectral efficiency of these systems. The predominant focus
of this presentation is on an overview and advances of IRIG 106-00 standardized FQPSK technologies.
FQAM systems will also be described. Use of FQPSK for applications such as telemetry, data links,
clear mode, TDMA ,CSMA and CDMA, OCDMA, WCDMA as well as OFDM – COFDM will be
included in the presentation.
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NEW GENERATION COMMAND RECEIVER FOR SATELLITE USING BENEFITS OF DIGITAL PROCESSING.Monica, G. Della, Tonello, E. 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 26-29, 1998 / Town & Country Resort Hotel and Convention Center, San Diego, California / Presentation of Alcatel Espace last studies and developments regarding TT&C receiver
Products for satellite. This document lays on 3 parts:
· a technical point of view showing digital demodulation principles used (base band
recovery, analytical head, PM or FM demodulation) and their related offered
possibilities(digital controlling loop, lock status detection, jammer detection,....)
· a technology/design description
· a synthesis showing performance and results
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BANDWIDTH LIMITED 320 MBPS TRANSMITTERAnderson, Christopher 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 28-31, 1996 / Town and Country Hotel and Convention Center, San Diego, California / With every new spacecraft that is designed comes a greater density of information that will
be stored once it is in operation. This, coupled with the desire to reduce the number of
ground stations needed to download this information from the spacecraft, places new
requirements on telemetry transmitters. These new transmitters must be capable of data
rates of 320 Mbps and beyond.
Although the necessary bandwidth is available for some non-bandwidth-limited
transmissions in Ka-Band and above, many systems will continue to rely on more narrow
allocations down to X-Band. These systems will require filtering of the modulation to meet
spectral limits. The usual requirements of this filtering also include that it not introduce
high levels of inter-symbol interference (ISI) to the transmission.
These constraints have been addressed at CE by implementing a DSP technique that pre-filters
a QPSK symbol set to achieve bandwidth-limited 320 Mbps operation. This
implementation operates within the speed range of the radiation-hardened digital
technologies that are currently available and consumes less power than the traditional high-speed
FIR techniques.
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Efficient Message Passing Decoding Using Vector-based MessagesGrimnell, Mikael, Tjäder, Mats January 2005 (has links)
<p>The family of Low Density Parity Check (LDPC) codes is a strong candidate to be used as Forward Error Correction (FEC) in future communication systems due to its strong error correction capability. Most LDPC decoders use the Message Passing algorithm for decoding, which is an iterative algorithm that passes messages between its variable nodes and check nodes. It is not until recently that computation power has become strong enough to make Message Passing on LDPC codes feasible. Although locally simple, the LDPC codes are usually large, which increases the required computation power. Earlier work on LDPC codes has been concentrated on the binary Galois Field, GF(2), but it has been shown that codes from higher order fields have better error correction capability. However, the most efficient LDPC decoder, the Belief Propagation Decoder, has a squared complexity increase when moving to higher order Galois Fields. Transmission over a channel with M-PSK signalling is a common technique to increase spectral efficiency. The information is transmitted as the phase angle of the signal.</p><p>The focus in this Master’s Thesis is on simplifying the Message Passing decoding when having inputs from M-PSK signals transmitted over an AWGN channel. Symbols from higher order Galois Fields were mapped to M-PSK signals, since M-PSK is very bandwidth efficient and the information can be found in the angle of the signal. Several simplifications of the Belief Propagation has been developed and tested. The most promising is the Table Vector Decoder, which is a Message Passing Decoder that uses a table lookup technique for check node operations and vector summation as variable node operations. The table lookup is used to approximate the check node operation in a Belief Propagation decoder. Vector summation is used as an equivalent operation to the variable node operation. Monte Carlo simulations have shown that the Table Vector Decoder can achieve a performance close to the Belief Propagation. The capability of the Table Vector Decoder depends on the number of reconstruction points and the placement of them. The main advantage of the Table Vector Decoder is that its complexity is unaffected by the Galois Field used. Instead, there will be a memory space requirement which depends on the desired number of reconstruction points.</p>
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