5990 7036en
5990 7036en
5990 7036en
Beam
Long pulses
overlap
ulse
rt p tion
o
h
S solu
re
oes
Ech
Pul
attern
Pulse-on mean power
Echoes
Pulse
width
scan p
se
PRI
tit
epe
= Pulse
ion
rep
in
al
terv
c
1
uen
freq
n
o
titi
(PR
y (P
I)
RF)
Introduction
Beam
Long pulses
overlap
scan p
attern
Pulse-on mean power
Echoes
Pulse
width
ulse
rt p tion
o
h
S solu
re
Pul
er
PRI
tit
epe
= P
in
ion
re
ulse
al
terv
pet
itio
u
freq
(PR
enc
y (P
I)
RF)
oes
Ech
compression or modulation.
The linear frequency chirp is,
in concept, a simple modulation
to create and to decompress.
Frequency modulating (FM) the
radar pulse with a linear voltage
ramp creates a frequency-chirped
pulse. The chirped pulse is then
transmitted, as an uncompressed
pulse would normally be.
The radar receiver uses a special
filter with a significant linear
group delay opposite that of the
chirped pulse. The filters group
delay slows the lower-frequency
portion of the chirp and allows the
higher-frequency part of the chirp
to emerge from the filter earlier.
This has the effect of taking a long
pulse, easily integrated for greater
total power, and compressing it to a
short pulse easily identified among
other pulses.
De
Delay
Chirped pulse
Minimall
y delaye
d high fr
quencies
lay
ed
Compressed pulse
low
-fre
qu
en
cy
co
mp
on
en
ts
Frequency
Time
Time
Echo
Late gate
Early gate
Echoes
Ignore
late echoes
0
Ignore
early echoes
Time or range
ELINT/EW basics
Whats out there?
The various design criteria that
influence the chosen radar pulse
pattern also convey a great deal of
information about the nature of the
platform attached to the radar. A
slow PRF with a long pulse might
indicate a weather radar scanning
across hundreds of miles, where
a fast PRF and a short pulse width
might indicate a missiles terminal
homing radar scanning across a
Raster scan
Sector scan
Memory sequences
Segment
#1
Segment
#2
Segment
#3
Segment
#2
Segment
#1
Time
Key features:
Signal Studio
for Pulse Building
This specialized version of Signal
Studio (N7620B) supports a wide
array of imported or software-defined
pulse shapes and antenna patterns.
Pulse parameters
Rise and fall times
Edge shape
Jitter
Pulse width pattern
Modulation-on-pulse
Pattern parameters
Number of pulse repetitions
Pulse repetition interval (PRI) or
pulse repetition frequency (PRF)
PRI patterns: bursted, linear
ramp, staggered, stepped
PRI jitter: Gaussian, uniform
or U-shaped
PRI wobulation: sawtooth,
sinusoidal, triangular
Amplitude scaling
Frequency offset
Phase offset
Additional off time
Modulation-on-pulse
AM step
Barker codes (seven types)
BPSK and custom BPSK
FM chirp (linear or nonlinear)
QPSK and custom QPSK
Polyphase codes
Raster scan
Bidire
Rotational scan
l
ctiona
scan
Unidirectional scan
Conical scan
Rotational scan
Bidirectional scan
Unidirectional scan
11
12
Baseband pre-distortion
In terms of dynamic range, playing
back recordings of mission scenarios
is much like playing an analog
music recording. If the recordings
dynamic range is poor, the utility of
the recording as a test signal may
be of little value in determining the
response of radar or EW equipment.
Agilent AWGs and signal sources
have the best-available SFDR, a
key selection criterion in many
applications. To further expand the
utility of these instruments, Agilent
also offers the ability to enhance their
performance with digital baseband
radar pulse pre-distortion.
13
Simulation of
scanning antennas
To illustrate the application of the
signal generator to test an EW
system, consider the problem of
testing a shipboard early warning
system. In this case, the EW system
receives the radar pulses hitting
the ship and analyzes them to
determine the nature of their source
and bearing angle to the source.
Examining the pulse patterns as well
as their varying amplitude caused
by the antenna scanning pattern
provides critical information to an
EW countermeasure system.
14
Coherent
multi-channel
phase-adjustable
sources
cho puls
PSG
Return e
PSG
PSG
Radar pulse
PSG
Wavefront
Delay
Phased array
Receiver
Receiver
Coherent multi-channel
receiver test
Agilent sources and Signal Studio for
Pulse Building can be configured to
simulate phased-array radars. These
systems have many receiver inputs
and rely on the phase of arrival of the
incoming echoes. This can complicate
testing because the receive signal
must mimic a wavefront that contains
multiple radar echoes arriving from
distant points.
15
An alternative environment
for system simulation and
signal creation
Signal processing algorithms play
an important role in advanced radar
systems, especially high-performance
multi-mode systems. Algorithm
creation is a complex process that
becomes more efficient when developers have access to a sufficient set
of models for the various radar elements and functions: signal generation, multiple emitters, transmission,
antennas, transmit/receive switching,
clutter, noise, jamming, receiving,
signal processing, and measurements.
Figure 12. Return signals with clutter and jamming, as created with SystemVue and the
W1905 library
16
SystemVue
Signal generator
DUT
Signal analyzer
Figure 13. An example combination of software and instrumentation that can be used to create and generate radar test signals
1. The Results, part 2 section on page 6 of note 5991-1288EN describes the creation of a multi-emitter
environment that contains 16 radar signals, eight Barker-coded and eight LFM-chirped.
17
18
Figure 15. A real-time PXA helps you see, capture and understand highly elusive signals
Figure 17. Viewing a chirp pulse with the 89600 VSA software
For thorough analysis of complex signals, the 89600 VSA software can be
used with, or run inside, the X-Series
signal analyzers. In addition to timeand frequency-domain capabilities,
the 89600 VSA enables modulationdomain measurements of compressed
radar pulses. In addition, the VSA
software is compatible with the RTSA
capabilities, including frequency-mask
trigger, and supports capture and
playback of culprit signals.
In ultra-wideband applications, Agilent
also offers high-performance digitizers
and oscilloscopes. For example, the
M9703A is an eight-channel, 12-bit
AXIe digitizer that can capture signals
from DC to 2 GHz. It provides up to
3.2 GSa/s with four channels and up
to 1.6 GSa/s with eight channels. The
M9703A supports long acquisitions
with up to 4 GB of internal memory.
20
Pulse analysis
The testing of radar, EW and ELINT
systems requires a variety of routine
measurements. As mentioned earlier,
measurements of pulse width and PRI
(or PRF) provide important information about a radar systems resolution
and range, and can reveal potentially
important intelligence information.
Automated measurements of pulse
parameters can accelerate radar
diagnostics and provide a wealth of
EW information.
Two software applications can be
used to automate these measurements: The PXA and MXA signal
analyzers can be configured with
the N9051A pulse measurement
application, and oscilloscopes such as
the Infiniium 90000 can be equipped
with the W2650A oscilloscope signal
analysis (OSA) software. An X-Series
analyzer with N9051A is the better
choice when high dynamic range is
needed, pulse-modulation bandwidths
are less than 160 MHz, and spectrum
and spurious measurements are
needed. Multiple views enable
concurrent analysis of power vs. time,
frequency vs. time, phase vs. time or
power vs. frequency. Base capabilities
include PRI, PRF and pulse parameters such as width, duty cycle, rise
time, fall time, droop, overshoot and
ripple. An extended analysis option
enables statistical analysis of up to
200,000 pulses via trend analysis or
histogram plots.
21
Pulse
compression
radar
Waveform
exciter
DAC
PA
Antenna
STALO
COHO
I
Q
Synchronous
I/Q detector
LNA
IF
Pulse compression
lter
(Correlation lter)
VSA
23
www.agilent.com
www.agilent.com/find/ad
Conclusion
The latest generations of radar and
EW systems operate in a variety of
frequency bands and use wideband or
UWB signals that carry highly complex
modulation schemes. These systems
also use advanced DSP techniques to
mask or disguise their operation and
thereby avoid jamming.
The ongoing evolution of these
systems will continue to challenge
the performance and capabilities of
the solutions needed to generate
test signals, create synthetic test
ranges with multiple emitters, and
validate and analyze radar signals and
systems. As described in this note,
the interconnection and interaction of
test-and-measurement instrumentation and software provides a flexible
foundation for a variety of useful
solutions:
For signal creation, tools such
as the high-resolution, widebandwidth M8190A AWG and the
powerful Signal Studio for Pulse
Building software enable creation
of highly realistic signal scenarios.
For signal analysis, the PXA
provides excellent analysis
bandwidth and dynamic range, and
offers optional real-time spectrum
analyzer capabilities.
For advanced signal analysis, the
89600 VSA software adds time-,
frequency- and modulation-domain
capabilities to X-Series signal analyzers for microwave frequencies,
Infiniium scopes for UWB analysis,
and 16800 logic analyzers for digital
signals.
All these solutions are ready for
the challenges you face today, and
are future-ready for the evolving
requirements youll encounter over
the horizon.
myAgilent
myAgilent
www.agilent.com/find/myagilent
A personalized view into the information
most relevant to you.
www.agilent.com/find/contactus
Americas
Canada
Brazil
Mexico
United States
Asia Pacic
Australia
China
Hong Kong
India
Japan
Korea
Malaysia
Singapore
Taiwan
Other AP Countries