ITU-R F 1113-1994 Radio Systems Employing Meteor-Burst Propagation《应用流星猝发传播的无线系统》.pdf
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1、Rec. ITU-R F.1113 1RECOMMENDATION ITU-R F.1113RADIO SYSTEMS EMPLOYING METEOR-BURST PROPAGATION(Question ITU-R 157/9)(1994)Rec. ITU-R F.1113The ITU Radiocommunication Assembly,consideringa) that experiments have already shown the practicability of utilizing the frequency band between 30 and 50 MHzfor
2、 transmission by meteor-burst propagation to distances well beyond the horizon;b) that systems using this mode of propagation are already in service for burst data transmission,recommends1. that Annex 1 be used as guidance for the application of radio systems employing meteor-burst propagation.ANNEX
3、 1Radio systems employing meteor-burst propagation1. IntroductionThe phenomena of meteor-burst propagation using reflections from ionized meteor trails is described inRecommendation ITU-R PI.843. Recent advances in microprocessors and digital electronics mean that it is now possibleto construct a me
4、teor-burst communication system at a realistic commercial cost. This Annex describes two such systemsand presents results of tests carried out on these systems.2. Example meteor-burst system A2.1 System descriptionThe system is configured as a star network with a central master station and a capacit
5、y of up to 1 000 remotestations within the coverage area of 2 000 km radius (see Fig. 1). The system uses a half-duplex packet protocol withsingle segment automatic repeat transmissions in the presence of errors. Each of the remote stations is able tocommunicate with any number of other remote stati
6、ons via the central master station.Larger systems may be built using several master stations communicating with each other by full duplexmeteor-burst propagation such that all remotes can communicate with each other via combinations of master stationsover a series of 25 kHz channels. It is also poss
7、ible to construct a system without a master station by using point-to-pointtechniques when the remote stations perform the control functions. This latter system is not flexible and has to bereconfigured for any change in the number of stations.2 Rec. ITU-R F.1113FIGURE 1System block diagramRemote st
8、ationNo. 2RemotestationNo. 1RemotestationNo. 3MasterstationRemotestationNo. 999RemotestationNo. 1 000MonitorstationD01FIGURE 1/F.1113.D01 = 10 CMOne network system in Europe is designed with the maximum number of system functions concentrated in themaster station. This is to minimize the size, cost
9、and power consumption of the remote stations. The master stationperforms the functions of meteor trail illumination, system synchronization and message routing, but is transparent to theuser. It is the only component of the system which needs mains power.2.1.1 Essential system characteristicsThe sys
10、tem described operates in half-duplex mode using two frequencies around 46.9 MHz with a singlehorizontally polarized antenna at each station. In practice the master station antenna is an array of four “Yagi” antennasconnected together for omnidirectional coverage. It would be possible to use vertica
11、l polarization if required foroperational reasons such as mobile remote stations. The transmitter (see Fig. 2) is rated at 500 W. A transmit/receiveswitch allows call/listen cycles of approximately 80 ms duration. This alternate 40 ms call, 40 ms listen cycle is used toilluminate the meteor trails a
12、nd is known as probing. The probe transmissions may be addressed to individual remotestations or may be non-specific depending on system priority. The master station transmitter modulation is binary lowindex ( 30) phase shift keying (PSK) to minimize interference on adjacent channels. Synchronizatio
13、n of remotestations is achieved with Manchester encoding of the clock signal within the data.Remote stations transmit with high index ( 90) PSK modulation for maximum chance of detection by themaster station. Two protocols are supported, one for data acquisition and one for communication. In normal
14、operation,the master station sends probe words and checks received signals for valid data segments from a remote station (seeFig. 3). Immediately a valid segment is found, an acknowledgement is sent back to the remote source. At the same time acomputer memory check is made for any segments addressed
15、 to that remote station and if found, the first segment of thereturn message is appended to the acknowledgement. If a segment is returned in this way, an acknowledgement from theremote station is sought. In all cases if no acknowledgement is received, the segment is repeated until it is.Rec. ITU-R F
16、.1113 3FIGURE 2Master stationT/R switchReceiver TransmitterDiskdriveComputerPowersupplyModemStationconsoleTo monitorstationD02FIGURE 2/F.1113.D02 = 14 CMThe system is controlled by a monitor, connected to the master station by radio or landline. This connectionenables the monitor to be at the admini
17、stration offices while allowing the master station to be remote in an ideal lowambient noise location. The system monitor checks overall performance and stores all the data transmitted so that userscan collect from the monitor rather than receiving in real time.In this system a remote station for da
18、ta acquisition is optimized for low power consumption and reliableoperation in conditions typically from 30 C to +60 C. The 100 W transmitter duty cycle is limited to 1%. The receiverhas a sensitivity of 118 dBm and there is a buffer store for packets of data or short text messages (see Fig. 4).A se
19、cond type of remote station for communication is optimized for maximum information transfer rate whichis related to signal-to-noise ratio. The 300 W transmitter duty cycle is limited to 10%. The receiver has a sensitivity of121 dBm and there is a buffer store with up to 20 kbytes of memory (see Fig.
20、 5).The communication protocol makes use of the natural diversity in space and time of the meteor trails toprovide automatic polling to a maximum of 1 000 remote stations. When a path is present, the data is sent andacknowledged during the same event. Long data strings require several events and rec
21、ombination at the receiver. Text istransmitted in a series of segments which are all acknowledged at the end of the message. It is possible to continuouslymonitor the signal-to-noise ratio and adaptively change the data rate between 2 kbit/s and 64 kbit/s to maximize thethroughput.4 Rec. ITU-R F.111
22、3FIGURE 3Typical meteor-burst data exchange protocol1.2A.2B.2C.Master station alternately transmits and listens2. Master station receives message(s) from remoteRemote station has message to send and its receiver listens for probe signalRemote station message length 24 bytesListen Probe Listen Probe
23、Listen Probe Listen Probe ListenListen Probe Listen Listen Ack Listen Probe Listen AckListen Data segment 24 bytes ListenListen Additional segment ListenIf all messages cannot be sent on one meteor event, the remaining messages/parts of message are stored untilthe next available event Listen Probe L
24、isten Data segment 24 bytes Listen (Additional segment)3A.4A.4. Master station hears remote but there is no data queued at either stationRemote station receives message(s) from master3. Master station sends message(s) to remoteListen Probe Listen Ack Listen Probe Listen ProbeListen No text Listen Li
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