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On 25 mar, 15:52, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
*"Wimpie" napisal w ... On 25 mar, 10:17, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote: I am simple asking if radio people have trouble with the fact that the speed of waves are frequeny dependent. I am interesting with the real radio waves in the real media. Here is an example: "Pulsars are spinning neutron stars that emit pulses at very regular intervals ranging from milliseconds to seconds. Astronomers believe that the pulses are emitted simultaneously over a wide range of frequencies. However, as observed on Earth, the components of each pulse emitted at higher radio frequencies arrive before those emitted at lower frequencies. This dispersion occurs because of the ionised component of the interstellar medium, which makes the group velocity frequency dependent". S Try to find document "Descanso4--Voyager_new.pdf" (very likely the first result in google). This describes the Voyager communication system. It is now more the 10 light hours from us (as far as I know). As far as I know, they don't equalize to correct for in band dispersion (due to wave propagation). Maybe other people have better info on this. They used the "Ultrastable oscillator". They measure the ions and electrons density in the interstellar medium. So the band dispersion is obvious and the only remedy is the "Ultrastable oscillator". Sorry, I don't see the link between "ultrastable oscillator" and dispersion. Good oscillators in both transmitting and receiving equipment are required to get the lowest possible Eb/No for your digital modulation scheme. So AM and FM are quite opposite. *It seems to me that FM is not the best for the long distances. It seems to me that here is a confirmation of that: ""Because of the low signal-to-noise ratio, as with amateur-radio practice, EME signals can generally only be detected using narrow-band receiving systems. This means that the only aspect of the TV signal that could be detected is the field scan modulation (AM vision carrier). FM broadcast signals also feature wide frequency modulation, hence EME reception is generally not possible. There are no published records of VHF/UHF EME amateur radio contacts using FM." From:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TV_and_FM_DX I do not understand this but guess. Low bit rates, result in low required power, so it is true that with the advent of low bitrate digital schemes, EME is within the reach of more radio amateurs. As these modes use narrow bandwidth, dispersion effects are negligible when looking to the demodulation of the received signal (as far as I know). Even amateurs using satellite communication with analog voice, don't have to modify their demodulators. Wim PA3DJS |
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