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| United States Patent | 3988679 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/3988679.html |
| Inventor(s) | Clarke; James McMillen (Whitesboro, NY);
Hearty; Charles E. (Marcy, NY);
Rougas; John A. (Liverpool, NY) |
| Abstract | In a returned wave object detection receiving system, for receiving a
wideband signal, means are provided for attenuating narrowband
interference. A returned signal is split such that equal power broadband
signals are applied to a plurality of channels. In each channel, the
broadband signal is coupled through a narrowband filter and a linear
amplifier in parallel with a detector and noise correlator. The narrowband
signals are recombined in an adder having an output coupled to utilization
means. Disabling means are coupled in each channel for disabling one
narrowband channel in response to narrowband interference therein. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 3988679 |
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Wideband receiving system including multi-channel filter for eliminating
narrowband interference |
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| Publication Date |
October 26, 1976 |
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| Filing Date |
February 24, 1975 |
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| Parent Case |
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 357,160 filed May 4,
1973 by James M. Clarke, Charles E. Hearty and John A. Rougas entitled
"Wideband Receiving System Including Multi-Channel Filter for Eliminating
Narrowband Interference", now abandoned. |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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We claim:
1. Means for removing narrowband interference from a wideband signal for
connection between an input means and a utilization means comprising, in
combination:
a broadband power splitter coupled to said input means;
an adder for providing an output to said utilization means; and
a plurality of channels coupled between said broadband power splitter and
said adder, each channel comprising a narrowband filter having a bandwidth
corresponding to a portion of the bandwidth of said broadband power
splitter, a linear amplifier for amplifying the signal passed by said
narrowband filter, an envelope detector connected to the output of said
narrowband filter, high and low pass filters connected in parallel with
each other and in series with said envelope detector, and switch means
connected to transmit the output of said linear amplifier to said adder,
said switch means including control means responsive to the outputs of
said high and low pass filters for operating said switch means to
substantially attenuate the transmission of said signal from said linear
amplifier to said adder when the difference in signal levels passed by
said high and low pass filters indicates the presence of a narrowband
signal, whereby the output of one channel is attenuated in the presence of
a narrowband signal and a linear system is provided.
2. A receiving system for eliminating narrowband interference from a
wideband signal coupled between an input means and utilization means
comprising, in combination:
a plurality of bandpass filters coupled to said input means, each of said
filters having a passband comprising a different portion of the bandwidth
of said wideband signal;
an amplifier connected to the output of each of said bandpass filters;
interference detection means coupled to the outputs of said bandpass
filters, said interference detection means being responsive to a
narrowband signal passed by one of said filters and providing a
predetermined output indicative thereof;
coupling means for coupling the signals passed by said amplifiers to the
utilization means to present a wideband signal thereto; and
switch means connected between the outputs of said amplifiers and said
coupling means, said switch means being controlled by said interference
detection means such that said predetermined output from the latter
operates to cause said switch means to substantially attenuate the signal
passed by the amplifier connected to the bandpass filter passing a
narrowband signal, whereby narrowband distortion is substantially
eliminated from said wideband signal as presented to said utilization
means. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to reflected wave object detection systems, and more
particularly to elimination of narrowband interference appearing in
wideband returns.
In a wideband object detection system, narrowband interference may enter a
system's detector and inhibit detection of desired wideband signals. An
example of a wideband object detection system is pulse compression radar.
In a pulse compression radar system a conventional narrow pulse, wideband
radar signal is generated and expanded by some means such as a delay line
circuit prior to transmission. A wideband signal is thus transmitted. The
wideband return is received and coupled through a complementary circuit
which compresses the return signal for processing by the radar system. In
this manner, a radar system may utilize the power capability of a long
pulse system while maintaining the resolution available with a narrow
pulse system. An example of pulse compression radar is found in U.S. Pat.
No. 3,216,013 -- Thor issued Nov. 2, 1965 and assigned to General Electric
Company, the assignee herein. In such a system, reception of a narrowband
signal at the same frequency as the compressed pulse which is processed by
the system may inhibit detection of the wideband signal which is
compressed.
Prior systems have been provided which provide noise limiting of an entire
wideband signal. While such systems are effective, they decrease dynamic
range. For example, if a non-linear device is used which limits 10db on
wideband noise in a system having an 18db compression ratio, the maximum a
target will compress will be 8db above noise. For systems incorporating
video blanking in high clutter (ground return) environments, it is
advantageous to maintain full dynamic range in order to avoid blanking
target returns in clutter.
OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide means for
minimizing narrowband interference in a wideband returned wave object
detection system while maintaining normal detector dynamic range and
system sensitivity.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a signal
processing arrangement of the type described in which linearity is
maintained.
It is a more specific object of the present invention to provide a signal
processing arrangement of the type described utilizing a plurality of
narrowband channels to process a wideband signal.
Briefly stated, in accordance with the present invention, in a returned
wave object detection receiving system for receiving a wideband signal,
means are provided for detecting and attenuating narrowband interference.
A returned signal is split into a plurality of wideband signals, each of
which is coupled to a separate channel. In each channel, the wideband
signal is coupled through a narrowband filter and a linear amplifier in
parallel with a detector and noise correlator. The narrowband signals are
recombined in an adder having an output coupled to utilization means.
Disabling means are coupled in each channel for disabling one narrowband
channel in response to narrowband interference therein.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The means by which the foregoing objects and features of novelty are
achieved are pointed out with particularity in the claims forming the
concluding portion of the specification. The invention, both as to its
organization and manner of operation, may be further understood by
reference to the following description taken in connection with the
following drawings.
Of the drawings:
FIG. 1 is a block diagrammatic illustration of a signal processing circuit
constructed in accordance with the present invention for incorporation in
a system such as a pulse compression radar system;
FIG. 2 is a waveform chart illustrating a wideband returned signal and an
undesired narrowband signal interference.
FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram showing the "a" signal channel of FIG. 1 and
in particular illustrating the details of the detector and noise
correlator portion thereof.
FIGS. 4a and 4b are schematic circuit diagrams of the low pass filter and
the high pass filter, respectively, shown in FIG. 3.
FIGS. 5a and 5b are waveform diagrams depicting the i.f. signal at point A
and the demodulated signal at point B indicated at the input and output,
respectively, of the detector and preamplifier of FIG. 3.
FIG. 5c is a waveform diagram showing the high and low pass filter outputs
summed by the resistors R1 and R2 of FIG. 3.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to FIG. 1, there is illustrated in block diagrammatic form a
circuit for minimizing narrowband interference constructed in accordance
with the present invention.
Returned signals are supplied to the circuit by an input means such as an
antenna 1. In other embodiments, it is possible for the signal which is
processed by the circuit of the present invention to be provided from
other signal processing circuitry rather than directly from an antenna.
The antenna 1 has an output coupled to a broadband power splitter 2 which
provides a plurality of wideband outputs, each comprising the information
of the input signal. The outputs of the broadband power splitter 2 are
designated 2a, 2b, . . . 2j. While ten is the total number of outputs
selected for a particular embodiment, the number of outputs chosen for the
broadband power splitter 2 is a matter of choice. The number of outputs
desired depends upon the degree of resolution of narrowband signals
desired which must be considered in conjunction with the cost and
limitations of providing a larger number of signal processing channels.
Channels a, b . . . j are provided, each respectively connected to the
correspondingly alphabetically designated output of the broadband power
splitter 2. Components of each channel a - j are denoted by a number
indicating a component and a letter denoting the channel in which the
component is included. Discussion of the construction of each channel is
general and therefore each component in each channel below is designated
by number only, there being one of each component in each channel a
through j. The following description is in terms of components of an
analog system. Equivalent components for construction of a digital system
will suggest themselves readily to those skilled in the art.
Each channel a-j comprises a narrowband filter 3 having an input connected
to one output of the broadband power splitter 2 and providing an output to
a linear amplifier 4 and also to a detector and noise correlator 5. The
output of the linear amplifier 4 is connected to a signal input of an
output switch 6, and the output of the detector and noise correlator 5 is
connected to a control input of the output switch 6. Each output switch
6a, 6b, . . . 6j is respectively connected to an input 7a, 7b, . . . 7j of
an adder 7. The adder 7 has an output 8 connected to utilization means 9.
The utilization means 9 include radar receiving circuitry and they also
include signal compressing circuitry. The utilization means 9 may also be
viewed as an entire radar circuit including a transmitter.
FIG. 3 shows in detail the circuits of signal channel a. The broadband
signal from output 2a of power splitter 2 is passed to input 7a of adder 7
through the narrowband filter 3a, a signal divider 12, the linear
amplifier 4a and the rf switch 6a. The latter may be a conventional diode
microwave switch and includes appropriate drive circuits for interrupting
the path to input 7a in response to a logic level signal from the detector
and noise correlator circuits 5a. In the absence of the logic level signal
switch 6a is closed and passes the signal to input 7a substantially
undiminished.
The detector and noise correlator circuits 5a are shown below the dashed
line in FIG. 3. Since the corresponding circuits 5b-5j for the other
signal channels are substantially identical to the circuit 5a only the
latter is described herein.
The broadband signal from the second output of signal divider 12 is
presented to the input of a detector and preamplifier 14. The signal
passed by the signal divider is an i.f. signal of a form, for example,
shown on the voltage-time plot of FIG. 5a. Detector 14 is a conventional
envelope detector which demodulates the i.f. signal, i.e., it removes the
rf carrier and presents the detected envelope on output line B. The
resultant signal is of the form illustrated on the plot of FIG. 5b. This
signal is transmitted to a pair of parallel-connected high and low pass
filters 20 and 18 by a unity-gain inverting amplifier 16. Amplifier 16
serves as a zero source resistance driver for the filters and may be any
conventional wideband operational amplifier.
The filters 18 and 20 operate to detect the presence of a strong
low-frequency (essentially D.C.) signal component in the envelope signal
passed by detector 14. Such a signal component represents the type of
narrowband interference which is desired to be suppressed. Suppression of
this signal is effected by the opening of switch 6a which results in the
exclusion of the a channel signal from the summation signal generated on
output 8 of adder 7 as described above.
Control of switch 6a is implemented through the use of a summing network
comprising a variable gain, inverting amplifier 22 and a pair of summing
resistances R1 and R2. Amplifier 22 may be an operational amplifier of the
type utilized for amplifier 16 except that a variable resistance is
provided in the feedback for gain adjustment. Amplifier 22 also includes
means for rectifying the signal from filter 20.
The outputs from filters 18 and 20 (the output of the latter having been
rectified and inverted by amplifier 22) are summed at the junction of R1
and R2 and a difference signal is presented to the negative input port of
a voltage comparator amplifier 26. If the magnitude of the signal at the
negative port exceeds the D.C. level presented to the positive port from a
threshold voltage source V.sub.T the output of amplifier 26 switches and
presents a logic level signal to latch circuit 30 which in turn operates
the driver logic of switch 6a to open (interrupt) the channel. Latch 30
may be a conventional "D latch" logic circuit. When the signal at the
R1-R2 junction point drops below the V.sub.T threshold amplifier 26
switches back to its normal state and causes switch 6a to recouple the
i.f. signal to adder input 7a.
An integrating capacitor 24 may be coupled to the R1-R2 junction point to
provide a smoothing effect. This is helpful in situations when the
magnitude of the R1-R2 difference signal is riding close to that of
V.sub.T. The smoothing action of capacitor 24 tends to minimize "toggling"
of the latch 30, i.e., it prevents high frequency fluctuations of the
R1-R2 signal from switching comparator 26 back and forth. Also, a sampling
signal S may be fed to the comparator and the latch on a line 28. This
signal may be used to gate the operation of the detector and noise
correlator so that it can operate to turn off channel switch 6a only at
certain times during system operation, e.g., when the broadband signal on
input line 2a is most likely to contain narrowband interference as
distinguished from, for example, clutter return signals.
FIGS. 4a and 4b show the low pass and the high pass filter circuits,
respectively. The filters may, for example, be third order transitional
Butterworth-Thompson circuits.
OPERATION OF THE CIRCUIT
Assume an embodiment for detecting a broadband returned signal having a
bandwidth of 7 MHz centered at 30.0 MHz. Ten channels a-j are provided in
the present embodiment, and the broadband power splitter 2 is selected to
provide ten broadband outputs each having a bandwidth of 7 MHz. This
frequency range is noted on the abscissa of the plot of FIG. 2, in which
the ordinate is signal amplitude. The bandwidths of the narrowband filters
3a - 3j are selected to provide ten contiguous narrowband output signals
having bandwidths of 700 KHz. The inputs of the narrowband filters 3a - 3j
are connected to the outputs of the broadband power splitter 2a - 2j (FIG.
1). Operation in the presence of ambient wideband noise is first explained
prior to operation to minimize narrowband interference. Assume the
returned wave signal being processed is a linear frequency modulated pulse
with a bandwidth of 7 MHz centered at 30.0 MHz having a signal level of PS
and that the ambient wideband noise received is of the same frequency
range having a power level PN. The linear frequency modulated returned
wave signal has an instantaneous bandwidth that approaches 0.sub.HZ. It
may therefore be assumed that the signal can only occupy one channel a - j
at a time. Consequently, the channel a - j which is occupied by the signal
at any time t during the pulse contributes exactly the input signal power
to the linear amplifier 4 and the output switch 6 for coupling to the
adder 7.
The noise power in each channel a - j after passing through each narrowband
filter 3 is PN/j. In the adder, the ambient wideband noise contributed by
each channel a - j is combined such that the output power contributed by
the channel occupied by the signal at a time t may be expressed as PN/j +
PS. The power contributed to the adder 7 by the remaining channels may be
expressed as (j-1) PN/j. Thus the total output power equals total input
power, mainly PN + PS. In other words, the circuit of the present
invention is linear, and the above-described input/output characteristics
remain valid for any value of signal and noise in any channel.
The system reacts to undesirable narrowband signals as follows. Assume and
undesirable level of narrowband interference is present at a frequency of
26.85 MHz. This signal is illustrated in FIG. 2 as a narrowband signal
peak having a level equal to the maximum signal level delivered to each
channel a - j. This signal passes through filter 3a (FIG. 3) with no
attenuation, and is coupled to the linear amplifier 4a and the detector
and noise correlator 5a. The power level of the desired broadband signal
components are reduced by a factor of ten by the filter 3a. This is
because the pass band of the filter is one-tenth of the band of the total
signal. The low frequency components of the channel signal are thus
magnified substantially in comparison to the high frequency components.
The high and low pass filters 20 and 18, operating through the summing
network R1-R2 on the comparator 26 generate a detection output signal by
virtue of the fact that low pass filter 18, in passing only the low
frequency portion of the channel signal, presents the summing network with
a substantially greater signal level than is received from the high pass
filter. This is seen in the voltage-time plot of FIG. 5c. The output from
filter 20 is the relatively low level positive signal HP2 while the output
from filter 18 is the higher level negative signal LP2. The difference
signal HP2-LP2 exceeds the threshold level V.sub.T such that latch 30
operates to turn switch 6a off.
The variable gain amplifier 22 is set so that in the presence of a pure
broadband signal the high pass output HP1 is approximately equal to the
low pass output LP1. The threshold level V.sub.T is selected so that
switch 6a is turned off only under the condition when the HP-LP ratio is
substantially weighted in favor of the LP output.
In the situation where switch 6a shuts off the a channel the total input to
the adder 7 from channels b-j is (j-1) PS + (j-1) PN, where j is the
number of channels. In accordance with the previous description, the total
output from the adder 7 at the output 8 is equal to (j-1) (PS + PN). In
other words, the high level undesired narrowband interference is
eliminated while only a small portion of desired target signal power is
lost. As the number of channels is increased, the effect of narrowband
interference is reduced.
What is thus provided is a signal processing arrangement in which linearity
is maintained while undesired narrowband signals are rejected. The
description of the present embodiment should suggest other ways in which a
signal processing arrangement in accordance with the present invention can
be achieved, such as by the use of digital signal processing components.
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Description  |
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