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yes, any em wave will be shifted in frequency/wavelength when there is a
relative velocity between the tx and rx. doppler shift is NOT 'a tone frequency'. it may be heard as a tone in a receiver if you beat it against a fixed local oscillator. But the doppler shift does not modulate the wave or change the type of modulation that may already be imposed on the wave by the transmitter. now if you are talking about a doppler direction finder system... those work best with unmodulated signals, but will work with modulated signals but may have difficulty getting reliable directions, especially if the modulation frequency is near the rotational frequency of the array. "mazerom" wrote in message oups.com... the doppler shift is fundamentally a tone frequency brought about by a continuous wave source moving in and out. is it possible to have reliable doppler shift when our source is spread spectrum or say some form of digital modulation? |
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