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Software-defined radio

Software-defined radio (SDR) is a radio communication system where components that conventionally have been implemented in analog hardware (e.g. mixers, filters, amplifiers, modulators/demodulators, detectors, etc.) are instead implemented by means of software on a personal computer or embedded system.[1] While the concept of SDR is not new, the rapidly evolving capabilities of digital electronics render practical many processes which were once only theoretically possible.

A basic SDR system may consist of a personal computer equipped with a sound card, or other analog-to-digital converter, preceded by some form of RF front end. Significant amounts of signal processing are handed over to the general-purpose processor, rather than being done in special-purpose hardware (electronic circuits). Such a design produces a radio which can receive and transmit widely different radio protocols (sometimes referred to as waveforms) based solely on the software used.

Software radios have significant utility for the military and cell phone services, both of which must serve a wide variety of changing radio protocols in real time. In the long term, software-defined radios are expected by proponents like the Wireless Innovation Forum to become the dominant technology in radio communications. SDRs, along with software defined antennas are the enablers of cognitive radio.[2]

Operating principles Edit

 
Software defined radio concept

Superheterodyne receivers use a VFO (variable-frequency oscillator), mixer, and filter to tune the desired signal to a common IF (intermediate frequency) or baseband. Typically in SDR, this signal is then sampled by the analog-to-digital converter. However, in some applications it is not necessary to tune the signal to an intermediate frequency and the radio frequency signal is directly sampled by the analog-to-digital converter (after amplification).

Real analog-to-digital converters lack the dynamic range to pick up sub-microvolt, nanowatt-power radio signals produced by an antenna. Therefore, a low-noise amplifier must precede the conversion step and this device introduces its own problems. For example, if spurious signals are present (which is typical), these compete with the desired signals within the amplifier's dynamic range. They may introduce distortion in the desired signals, or may block them completely. The standard solution is to put band-pass filters between the antenna and the amplifier, but these reduce the radio's flexibility. Real software radios often have two or three analog channel filters with different bandwidths that are switched in and out.

The flexibility of SDR allows for dynamic spectrum usage, alleviating the need to statically assign the scarce spectral resources to a single fixed service.[3]

History Edit

In 1970, a researcher[who?] at a United States Department of Defense laboratory coined the term "digital receiver". A laboratory called the Gold Room at TRW in California created a software baseband analysis tool called Midas, which had its operation defined in software.[citation needed]

In 1982, while working under a US Department of Defense contract at RCA, Ulrich L. Rohde's department developed the first SDR, which used the COSMAC (Complementary Symmetry Monolithic Array Computer) chip. Rohde was the first to present on this topic with his February 1984 talk, "Digital HF Radio: A Sampling of Techniques" at the Third International Conference on HF Communication Systems and Techniques in London.[4]

In 1984, a team at the Garland, Texas, Division of E-Systems Inc. (now Raytheon) coined the term "software radio" to refer to a digital baseband receiver, as published in their E-Team company newsletter. A 'Software Radio Proof-of-Concept' laboratory was developed by the E-Systems team that popularized Software Radio within various government agencies. This 1984 Software Radio was a digital baseband receiver that provided programmable interference cancellation and demodulation for broadband signals, typically with thousands of adaptive filter taps, using multiple array processors accessing shared memory.[5]

In 1991, Joe Mitola independently reinvented the term software radio for a plan to build a GSM base station that would combine Ferdensi's digital receiver with E-Systems Melpar's digitally controlled communications jammers for a true software-based transceiver. E-Systems Melpar sold the software radio idea to the US Air Force. Melpar built a prototype commanders' tactical terminal in 1990–1991 that employed Texas Instruments TMS320C30 processors and Harris Corporation digital receiver chip sets with digitally synthesized transmission. The Melpar prototype didn't last long because when E-Systems ECI Division manufactured the first limited production units, they decided to "throw out those useless C30 boards", replacing them with conventional RF filtering on transmit and receive and reverting to a digital baseband radio instead of the SpeakEasy like IF ADC/DACs of Mitola's prototype. The Air Force would not let Mitola publish the technical details of that prototype, nor would they let Diane Wasserman publish related software life cycle lessons learned because they regarded it as a "USAF competitive advantage".[citation needed] So instead, with USAF permission, in 1991, Mitola described the architecture principles without implementation details in a paper, "Software Radio: Survey, Critical Analysis and Future Directions" which became the first IEEE publication to employ the term in 1992.[6] When Mitola presented the paper at the conference, Bob Prill of GEC Marconi began his presentation following Mitola with: "Joe is absolutely right about the theory of a software radio and we are building one."[citation needed] Prill gave a GEC Marconi paper on PAVE PILLAR, a SpeakEasy precursor. SpeakEasy, the military software radio was formulated by Wayne Bonser, then of Rome Air Development Center (RADC), now Rome Labs; by Alan Margulies of MITRE Rome, NY; and then Lt Beth Kaspar, the original DARPA SpeakEasy project manager and by others at Rome including Don Upmal. Although Mitola's IEEE publications resulted in the largest global footprint for software radio, Mitola privately credits that DoD lab of the 1970s with its leaders Carl, Dave, and John with inventing the digital receiver technology on which he based software radio once it was possible to transmit via software.[citation needed]

A few months after the National Telesystems Conference 1992, in an E-Systems corporate program review, a vice-president of E-Systems Garland Division objected to Melpar's (Mitola's) use of the term "software radio" without credit to Garland. Alan Jackson, Melpar VP of marketing at that time, asked the Garland VP if their laboratory or devices included transmitters. The Garland VP said: "No, of course not — ours is a software radio receiver." Al replied: "Then it's a digital receiver but without a transmitter, it's not a software radio." Corporate leadership agreed with Al, so the publication stood. Many amateur radio operators and HF radio engineers had realized the value of digitizing HF at RF and of processing it with Texas Instruments TI C30 digital signal processors (DSPs) and their precursors during the 1980s and early 1990s. Radio engineers at Roke Manor in the UK and at an organization in Germany had recognized the benefits of ADC at the RF in parallel. Mitola's publication of software radio in the IEEE opened the concept to the broad community of radio engineers. His May 1995 special issue of the IEEE Communications Magazine with the cover "Software Radio" was regarded as a watershed event with thousands of academic citations. Mitola was introduced by Joao da Silva in 1997 at the First International Conference on Software Radio as "godfather" of software radio in no small part for his willingness to share such a valuable technology "in the public interest".[citation needed]

Perhaps the first software-based radio transceiver was designed and implemented by Peter Hoeher and Helmuth Lang at the German Aerospace Research Establishment (DLR, formerly DFVLR) in Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany, in 1988.[7] Both transmitter and receiver of an adaptive digital satellite modem were implemented according to the principles of a software radio, and a flexible hardware periphery was proposed.[citation needed]

In 1995, Stephen Blust coined the term "software defined radio", publishing a request for information from Bell South Wireless at the first meeting of the Modular Multifunction Information Transfer Systems (MMITS) forum in 1996, organized by the USAF and DARPA around the commercialization of their SpeakEasy II program. Mitola objected to Blust's term, but finally accepted it as a pragmatic pathway towards the ideal software radio. Although the concept was first implemented with an IF ADC in the early 1990s, software-defined radios have their origins in the U.S. and European defense sectors of the late 1970s (for example, Walter Tuttlebee described a VLF radio that used an ADC and an 8085 microprocessor),[8] about a year after the First International Conference in Brussels. One of the first public software radio initiatives was the U.S. DARPA-Air Force military project named SpeakEasy. The primary goal of the SpeakEasy project was to use programmable processing to emulate more than 10 existing military radios, operating in frequency bands between 2 and 2000 MHz.[9] Another SpeakEasy design goal was to be able to easily incorporate new coding and modulation standards in the future, so that military communications can keep pace with advances in coding and modulation techniques.[citation needed]

In 1997, Blaupunkt introduced the term "DigiCeiver" for their new range of DSP-based tuners with Sharx in car radios such as the Modena & Lausanne RD 148.

SpeakEasy phase I Edit

From 1990 to 1995, the goal of the SpeakEasy program was to demonstrate a radio for the U.S. Air Force tactical ground air control party that could operate from 2 MHz to 2 GHz, and thus could interoperate with ground force radios (frequency-agile VHF, FM, and SINCGARS), Air Force radios (VHF AM), Naval Radios (VHF AM and HF SSB teleprinters) and satellites (microwave QAM). Some particular goals were to provide a new signal format in two weeks from a standing start, and demonstrate a radio into which multiple contractors could plug parts and software.[citation needed]

The project was demonstrated at TF-XXI Advanced Warfighting Exercise, and demonstrated all of these goals in a non-production radio. There was some discontent with failure of these early software radios to adequately filter out of band emissions, to employ more than the simplest of interoperable modes of the existing radios, and to lose connectivity or crash unexpectedly. Its cryptographic processor could not change context fast enough to keep several radio conversations on the air at once. Its software architecture, though practical enough, bore no resemblance to any other. The SpeakEasy architecture was refined at the MMITS Forum between 1996 and 1999 and inspired the DoD integrated process team (IPT) for programmable modular communications systems (PMCS) to proceed with what became the Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS).[citation needed]

The basic arrangement of the radio receiver used an antenna feeding an amplifier and down-converter (see Frequency mixer) feeding an automatic gain control, which fed an analog-to-digital converter that was on a computer VMEbus with a lot of digital signal processors (Texas Instruments C40s). The transmitter had digital-to-analog converters on the PCI bus feeding an up converter (mixer) that led to a power amplifier and antenna. The very wide frequency range was divided into a few sub-bands with different analog radio technologies feeding the same analog to digital converters. This has since become a standard design scheme for wideband software radios.[citation needed]

SpeakEasy phase II Edit

The goal was to get a more quickly reconfigurable architecture, i.e., several conversations at once, in an open software architecture, with cross-channel connectivity (the radio can "bridge" different radio protocols). The secondary goals were to make it smaller, cheaper, and weigh less.[citation needed]

The project produced a demonstration radio only fifteen months into a three-year research project. This demonstration was so successful that further development was halted, and the radio went into production with only a 4 MHz to 400 MHz range.[citation needed]

The software architecture identified standard interfaces for different modules of the radio: "radio frequency control" to manage the analog parts of the radio, "modem control" managed resources for modulation and demodulation schemes (FM, AM, SSB, QAM, etc.), "waveform processing" modules actually performed the modem functions, "key processing" and "cryptographic processing" managed the cryptographic functions, a "multimedia" module did voice processing, a "human interface" provided local or remote controls, there was a "routing" module for network services, and a "control" module to keep it all straight.[citation needed]

The modules are said to communicate without a central operating system. Instead, they send messages over the PCI computer bus to each other with a layered protocol.[citation needed]

As a military project, the radio strongly distinguished "red" (unsecured secret data) and "black" (cryptographically-secured data).[citation needed]

The project was the first known to use FPGAs (field programmable gate arrays) for digital processing of radio data. The time to reprogram these was an issue limiting application of the radio. Today, the time to write a program for an FPGA is still significant, but the time to download a stored FPGA program is around 20 milliseconds. This means an SDR could change transmission protocols and frequencies in one fiftieth of a second, probably not an intolerable interruption for that task.[citation needed]

2000s Edit

The SpeakEasy SDR system in the 1994 uses a Texas Instruments TMS320C30 CMOS digital signal processor (DSP), along with several hundred integrated circuit chips, with the radio filling the back of a truck. By the late 2000s, the emergence of RF CMOS technology made it practical to scale down an entire SDR system onto a single mixed-signal system-on-a-chip, which Broadcom demonstrated with the BCM21551 processor in 2007. The Broadcom BCM21551 has practical commercial applications, for use in 3G mobile phones.[10][11]

Military usage Edit

United States Edit

The Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) was a program of the US military to produce radios that provide flexible and interoperable communications. Examples of radio terminals that require support include hand-held, vehicular, airborne and dismounted radios, as well as base-stations (fixed and maritime).

This goal is achieved through the use of SDR systems based on an internationally endorsed open Software Communications Architecture (SCA). This standard uses CORBA on POSIX operating systems to coordinate various software modules.

The program is providing a flexible new approach to meet diverse soldier communications needs through software programmable radio technology. All functionality and expandability is built upon the SCA.

SDRs flexibility results in expensive complexity, inability to optimize, slower ability to apply the latest technology, and rarely a tactical user need (since all users must pick and stay with the one, same radio if they're to communicate).

The SCA, despite its military origin, is under evaluation by commercial radio vendors for applicability in their domains. The adoption of general-purpose SDR frameworks outside of military, intelligence, experimental and amateur uses, however, is inherently hampered by the fact that civilian users can more easily settle with a fixed architecture, optimized for a specific function, and as such more economical in mass market applications. Still, software defined radio's inherent flexibility can yield substantial benefits in the longer run, once the fixed costs of implementing it have gone down enough to overtake the cost of iterated redesign of purpose built systems. This then explains the increasing commercial interest in the technology.

SCA-based infrastructure software and rapid development tools for SDR education and research are provided by the Open Source SCA Implementation – Embedded (OSSIE[12]) project. The Wireless Innovation Forum funded the SCA Reference Implementation project, an open source implementation of the SCA specification. (SCARI) can be downloaded for free.

Amateur and home use Edit

 
Microtelecom Perseus – an HF SDR for the amateur radio market

A typical amateur software radio uses a direct conversion receiver. Unlike direct conversion receivers of the more distant past, the mixer technologies used are based on the quadrature sampling detector and the quadrature sampling exciter.[13][14][15][16]

The receiver performance of this line of SDRs is directly related to the dynamic range of the analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) utilized.[17] Radio frequency signals are down converted to the audio frequency band, which is sampled by a high performance audio frequency ADC. First generation SDRs used a 44 kHz PC sound card to provide ADC functionality. The newer software defined radios use embedded high performance ADCs that provide higher dynamic range and are more resistant to noise and RF interference.

A fast PC performs the digital signal processing (DSP) operations using software specific for the radio hardware. Several software radio implementations use the open source SDR library DttSP.[18]

The SDR software performs all of the demodulation, filtering (both radio frequency and audio frequency), and signal enhancement (equalization and binaural presentation). Uses include every common amateur modulation: morse code, single-sideband modulation, frequency modulation, amplitude modulation, and a variety of digital modes such as radioteletype, slow-scan television, and packet radio.[19] Amateurs also experiment with new modulation methods: for instance, the DREAM open-source project decodes the COFDM technique used by Digital Radio Mondiale.

There is a broad range of hardware solutions for radio amateurs and home use. There are professional-grade transceiver solutions, e.g. the Zeus ZS-1[20][21] or FlexRadio,[22] home-brew solutions, e.g. PicAStar transceiver, the SoftRock SDR kit,[23] and starter or professional receiver solutions, e.g. the FiFi SDR[24] for shortwave, or the Quadrus coherent multi-channel SDR receiver[25] for short wave or VHF/UHF in direct digital mode of operation.

RTL-SDR Edit

 
Internals of a low-cost DVB-T USB dongle that uses Realtek RTL2832U (square IC on the right) as the controller and Rafael Micro R820T (square IC on the left) as the tuner

Eric Fry discovered that some common low-cost DVB-T USB dongles with the Realtek RTL2832U[26][27] controller and tuner, e.g. the Elonics E4000 or the Rafael Micro R820T,[28] can be used as a wide-band (3 MHz) SDR receiver. Experiments proved the capability of this setup to analyze Perseids meteor shower using Graves radar signals.[29] This project is being maintained at Osmocom.

HPSDR Edit

The HPSDR (High Performance Software Defined Radio) project uses a 16-bit 135 MSPS analog-to-digital converter that provides performance over the range 0 to 55 MHz comparable to that of a conventional analogue HF radio. The receiver will also operate in the VHF and UHF range using either mixer image or alias responses. Interface to a PC is provided by a USB 2.0 interface, although Ethernet could be used as well. The project is modular and comprises a backplane onto which other boards plug in. This allows experimentation with new techniques and devices without the need to replace the entire set of boards. An exciter provides 1/2 W of RF over the same range or into the VHF and UHF range using image or alias outputs.[30]

WebSDR Edit

WebSDR[31] is a project initiated by Pieter-Tjerk de Boer providing access via browser to multiple SDR receivers worldwide covering the complete shortwave spectrum. De Boer has analyzed Chirp Transmitter signals using the coupled system of receivers.[32]

Other applications Edit

On account of its increasing accessibility, with lower cost hardware, more software tools and documentation, the applications of SDR have expanded past their primary and historic use cases. SDR is now being used in areas such as wildlife tracking, radio astronomy, medical imaging research, and art.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Markus Dillinger; Kambiz Madani; Nancy Alonistioti (2003). Software Defined Radio: Architectures, Systems and Functions. Wiley & Sons. p. xxxiii. ISBN 0-470-85164-3.
  2. ^ Amaral, Cristiano (2021). Guia Moderno do Radioescuta. Brazil: Amazon. p. 333. ISBN 978-65-00-20800-9.
  3. ^ Staple, Gregory; Werbach, Kevin (March 2004). "The End of Spectrum Scarcity". IEEE Spectrum. 41 (3): 48–52. doi:10.1109/MSPEC.2004.1270548. S2CID 1667310.
  4. ^ Ulrich Rohde, N1UL, Recognized for Pioneering Work on SDR https://www.arrl.org/news/ulrich-rohde-n1ul-recognized-for-pioneering-work-on-sdr
  5. ^ Johnson, P. (May 1985). "New Research Lab Leads to Unique Radio Receiver" (PDF). E-Systems Team. 5 (4): 6–7.
  6. ^ Mitola III, J. (1992). Software radios-survey, critical evaluation and future directions. National Telesystems Conference. pp. 13/15 to 13/23. doi:10.1109/NTC.1992.267870. ISBN 0-7803-0554-X.
  7. ^ P. Hoeher and H. Lang, "Coded-8PSK modem for fixed and mobile satellite services based on DSP," in Proc. First Int. Workshop on Digital Signal Processing Techniques Applied to Space Communications, ESA/ ESTEC, Noordwijk, Netherlands, Nov. 1988; ESA WPP-006, Jan. 1990, pp. 117-123.
  8. ^ First International Workshop on Software Radio, Greece 1998
  9. ^ RJ Lackey and DW Upmal contributed the article "Speakeasy: The Military Software Radio" to the IEEE Communications Magazine special issue that Mitola edited and for which Mitola wrote the lead article "Software Radio Architecture", in May 1995.
  10. ^ Leenaerts, Domine (May 2010). Wide band RF CMOS circuit design techniques (PDF). IEEE Solid-State Circuits Society Distinguished Lecturers Program (SSCS DLP). NXP Semiconductors. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
  11. ^ "Broadcom ships "3G phone on a chip"". The LinuxDevices Archive. 16 October 2007. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  12. ^ . vt.edu. Archived from the original on 2009-03-12.
  13. ^ Youngblood, Gerald (July 2002), "A Software Defined Radio for the Masses, Part 1" (PDF), QEX, American Radio Relay League: 1–9
  14. ^ Youngblood, Gerald (Sep–Oct 2002), "A Software Defined Radio for the Masses, Part 2" (PDF), QEX, American Radio Relay League: 10–18
  15. ^ Youngblood, Gerald (Nov–Dec 2002), "A Software Defined Radio for the Masses, Part 3" (PDF), QEX, American Radio Relay League: 1–10
  16. ^ Youngblood, Gerald (Mar–Apr 2003), "A Software Defined Radio for the Masses, Part 4" (PDF), QEX, American Radio Relay League: 20–31
  17. ^ Rick Lindquist; Joel R. Hailas (October 2005). "FlexRadio Systems; SDR-1000 HF+VHF Software Defined Radio Redux". QST. Retrieved 2008-12-07.
  18. ^ DttSP on Source Forge
  19. ^ http://sourceforge.net/projects/sdr Open source SDR transceiver project using USRP and GNU Radio
  20. ^ ZS-1 Project
  21. ^ ZS-1 Zeus Transceiver
  22. ^ Flex Radio SDR Transceivers http://www.flex-radio.com/
  23. ^ SoftRock SDR Kits http://wb5rvz.com/sdr/
  24. ^ FiFi SDR Receiver http://o28.sischa.net/fifisdr/trac
  25. ^ Quadrus coherenet multi-channel SDR receiver
  26. ^ Using DVB USB Stick as SDR Receiver http://sdr.osmocom.org/trac/wiki/rtl-sdr
  27. ^ RTL-SDR Blog http://www.rtl-sdr.com
  28. ^ Support for the Rafael Micro R820T tuner in Cocoa Radio https://housedillon.com/blog/support-for-the-rafael-micro-r820t-tuner-o-cocoa-radio/
  29. ^ "Perseids shower using graves radar". EB3FRN. 7 October 2013.
  30. ^ "HPSDR Web Site".
  31. ^ WebSDR http://websdr.org
  32. ^ Chirp Signals analyzed using SDR http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8901/chirps/

Further reading Edit

  • Rohde, Ulrich L (February 26–28, 1985). "Digital HF Radio: A Sampling of Techniques". Third International Conference on HF Communication Systems and Techniques. London, England.
  • Software defined radio : architectures, systems, and functions. Dillinger, Madani, Alonistioti. Wiley, 2003. 454 pages. ISBN 0-470-85164-3 ISBN 9780470851647
  • Cognitive Radio Technology. Bruce Fette. Elsevier Science & Technology Books, 2006. 656 pags. ISBN 0-7506-7952-2 ISBN 9780750679527
  • Software Defined Radio for 3G, Burns. Artech House, 2002. ISBN 1-58053-347-7
  • Software Radio: A Modern Approach to Radio Engineering, Jeffrey H. Reed. Prentice Hall PTR, 2002. ISBN 0-13-081158-0
  • Signal Processing Techniques for Software Radio, Behrouz Farhang-Beroujeny. LuLu Press.
  • RF and Baseband Techniques for Software Defined Radio, Peter B. Kenington. Artech House, 2005, ISBN 1-58053-793-6
  • The ABC's of Software Defined Radio, Martin Ewing, AA6E. The American Radio Relay League, Inc., 2012, ISBN 978-0-87259-632-0
  • Software Defined Radio using MATLAB & Simulink and the RTL-SDR, R Stewart, K Barlee, D Atkinson, L Crockett, Strathclyde Academic Media, September 2015. ISBN 978-0-9929787-2-3

External links Edit

  • The world's first web-based software-defined receiver at the university of Twente, the Netherlands
  • Software-defined receivers connected to the Internet
  • Using software-defined television tuners as multimode HF / VHF / UHF receivers
  • Free SDR textbook: Software Defined Radio using MATLAB & Simulink and the RTL-SDR
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2023-02-23)

software, defined, radio, radio, communication, system, where, components, that, conventionally, have, been, implemented, analog, hardware, mixers, filters, amplifiers, modulators, demodulators, detectors, instead, implemented, means, software, personal, compu. Software defined radio SDR is a radio communication system where components that conventionally have been implemented in analog hardware e g mixers filters amplifiers modulators demodulators detectors etc are instead implemented by means of software on a personal computer or embedded system 1 While the concept of SDR is not new the rapidly evolving capabilities of digital electronics render practical many processes which were once only theoretically possible A basic SDR system may consist of a personal computer equipped with a sound card or other analog to digital converter preceded by some form of RF front end Significant amounts of signal processing are handed over to the general purpose processor rather than being done in special purpose hardware electronic circuits Such a design produces a radio which can receive and transmit widely different radio protocols sometimes referred to as waveforms based solely on the software used Software radios have significant utility for the military and cell phone services both of which must serve a wide variety of changing radio protocols in real time In the long term software defined radios are expected by proponents like the Wireless Innovation Forum to become the dominant technology in radio communications SDRs along with software defined antennas are the enablers of cognitive radio 2 Contents 1 Operating principles 2 History 2 1 SpeakEasy phase I 2 2 SpeakEasy phase II 2 3 2000s 3 Military usage 3 1 United States 4 Amateur and home use 4 1 RTL SDR 4 2 HPSDR 4 3 WebSDR 5 Other applications 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksOperating principles Edit nbsp Software defined radio conceptSuperheterodyne receivers use a VFO variable frequency oscillator mixer and filter to tune the desired signal to a common IF intermediate frequency or baseband Typically in SDR this signal is then sampled by the analog to digital converter However in some applications it is not necessary to tune the signal to an intermediate frequency and the radio frequency signal is directly sampled by the analog to digital converter after amplification Real analog to digital converters lack the dynamic range to pick up sub microvolt nanowatt power radio signals produced by an antenna Therefore a low noise amplifier must precede the conversion step and this device introduces its own problems For example if spurious signals are present which is typical these compete with the desired signals within the amplifier s dynamic range They may introduce distortion in the desired signals or may block them completely The standard solution is to put band pass filters between the antenna and the amplifier but these reduce the radio s flexibility Real software radios often have two or three analog channel filters with different bandwidths that are switched in and out The flexibility of SDR allows for dynamic spectrum usage alleviating the need to statically assign the scarce spectral resources to a single fixed service 3 History EditIn 1970 a researcher who at a United States Department of Defense laboratory coined the term digital receiver A laboratory called the Gold Room at TRW in California created a software baseband analysis tool called Midas which had its operation defined in software citation needed In 1982 while working under a US Department of Defense contract at RCA Ulrich L Rohde s department developed the first SDR which used the COSMAC Complementary Symmetry Monolithic Array Computer chip Rohde was the first to present on this topic with his February 1984 talk Digital HF Radio A Sampling of Techniques at the Third International Conference on HF Communication Systems and Techniques in London 4 In 1984 a team at the Garland Texas Division of E Systems Inc now Raytheon coined the term software radio to refer to a digital baseband receiver as published in their E Team company newsletter A Software Radio Proof of Concept laboratory was developed by the E Systems team that popularized Software Radio within various government agencies This 1984 Software Radio was a digital baseband receiver that provided programmable interference cancellation and demodulation for broadband signals typically with thousands of adaptive filter taps using multiple array processors accessing shared memory 5 In 1991 Joe Mitola independently reinvented the term software radio for a plan to build a GSM base station that would combine Ferdensi s digital receiver with E Systems Melpar s digitally controlled communications jammers for a true software based transceiver E Systems Melpar sold the software radio idea to the US Air Force Melpar built a prototype commanders tactical terminal in 1990 1991 that employed Texas Instruments TMS320C30 processors and Harris Corporation digital receiver chip sets with digitally synthesized transmission The Melpar prototype didn t last long because when E Systems ECI Division manufactured the first limited production units they decided to throw out those useless C30 boards replacing them with conventional RF filtering on transmit and receive and reverting to a digital baseband radio instead of the SpeakEasy like IF ADC DACs of Mitola s prototype The Air Force would not let Mitola publish the technical details of that prototype nor would they let Diane Wasserman publish related software life cycle lessons learned because they regarded it as a USAF competitive advantage citation needed So instead with USAF permission in 1991 Mitola described the architecture principles without implementation details in a paper Software Radio Survey Critical Analysis and Future Directions which became the first IEEE publication to employ the term in 1992 6 When Mitola presented the paper at the conference Bob Prill of GEC Marconi began his presentation following Mitola with Joe is absolutely right about the theory of a software radio and we are building one citation needed Prill gave a GEC Marconi paper on PAVE PILLAR a SpeakEasy precursor SpeakEasy the military software radio was formulated by Wayne Bonser then of Rome Air Development Center RADC now Rome Labs by Alan Margulies of MITRE Rome NY and then Lt Beth Kaspar the original DARPA SpeakEasy project manager and by others at Rome including Don Upmal Although Mitola s IEEE publications resulted in the largest global footprint for software radio Mitola privately credits that DoD lab of the 1970s with its leaders Carl Dave and John with inventing the digital receiver technology on which he based software radio once it was possible to transmit via software citation needed A few months after the National Telesystems Conference 1992 in an E Systems corporate program review a vice president of E Systems Garland Division objected to Melpar s Mitola s use of the term software radio without credit to Garland Alan Jackson Melpar VP of marketing at that time asked the Garland VP if their laboratory or devices included transmitters The Garland VP said No of course not ours is a software radio receiver Al replied Then it s a digital receiver but without a transmitter it s not a software radio Corporate leadership agreed with Al so the publication stood Many amateur radio operators and HF radio engineers had realized the value of digitizing HF at RF and of processing it with Texas Instruments TI C30 digital signal processors DSPs and their precursors during the 1980s and early 1990s Radio engineers at Roke Manor in the UK and at an organization in Germany had recognized the benefits of ADC at the RF in parallel Mitola s publication of software radio in the IEEE opened the concept to the broad community of radio engineers His May 1995 special issue of the IEEE Communications Magazine with the cover Software Radio was regarded as a watershed event with thousands of academic citations Mitola was introduced by Joao da Silva in 1997 at the First International Conference on Software Radio as godfather of software radio in no small part for his willingness to share such a valuable technology in the public interest citation needed Perhaps the first software based radio transceiver was designed and implemented by Peter Hoeher and Helmuth Lang at the German Aerospace Research Establishment DLR formerly DFVLR in Oberpfaffenhofen Germany in 1988 7 Both transmitter and receiver of an adaptive digital satellite modem were implemented according to the principles of a software radio and a flexible hardware periphery was proposed citation needed In 1995 Stephen Blust coined the term software defined radio publishing a request for information from Bell South Wireless at the first meeting of the Modular Multifunction Information Transfer Systems MMITS forum in 1996 organized by the USAF and DARPA around the commercialization of their SpeakEasy II program Mitola objected to Blust s term but finally accepted it as a pragmatic pathway towards the ideal software radio Although the concept was first implemented with an IF ADC in the early 1990s software defined radios have their origins in the U S and European defense sectors of the late 1970s for example Walter Tuttlebee described a VLF radio that used an ADC and an 8085 microprocessor 8 about a year after the First International Conference in Brussels One of the first public software radio initiatives was the U S DARPA Air Force military project named SpeakEasy The primary goal of the SpeakEasy project was to use programmable processing to emulate more than 10 existing military radios operating in frequency bands between 2 and 2000 MHz 9 Another SpeakEasy design goal was to be able to easily incorporate new coding and modulation standards in the future so that military communications can keep pace with advances in coding and modulation techniques citation needed In 1997 Blaupunkt introduced the term DigiCeiver for their new range of DSP based tuners with Sharx in car radios such as the Modena amp Lausanne RD 148 SpeakEasy phase I Edit From 1990 to 1995 the goal of the SpeakEasy program was to demonstrate a radio for the U S Air Force tactical ground air control party that could operate from 2 MHz to 2 GHz and thus could interoperate with ground force radios frequency agile VHF FM and SINCGARS Air Force radios VHF AM Naval Radios VHF AM and HF SSB teleprinters and satellites microwave QAM Some particular goals were to provide a new signal format in two weeks from a standing start and demonstrate a radio into which multiple contractors could plug parts and software citation needed The project was demonstrated at TF XXI Advanced Warfighting Exercise and demonstrated all of these goals in a non production radio There was some discontent with failure of these early software radios to adequately filter out of band emissions to employ more than the simplest of interoperable modes of the existing radios and to lose connectivity or crash unexpectedly Its cryptographic processor could not change context fast enough to keep several radio conversations on the air at once Its software architecture though practical enough bore no resemblance to any other The SpeakEasy architecture was refined at the MMITS Forum between 1996 and 1999 and inspired the DoD integrated process team IPT for programmable modular communications systems PMCS to proceed with what became the Joint Tactical Radio System JTRS citation needed The basic arrangement of the radio receiver used an antenna feeding an amplifier and down converter see Frequency mixer feeding an automatic gain control which fed an analog to digital converter that was on a computer VMEbus with a lot of digital signal processors Texas Instruments C40s The transmitter had digital to analog converters on the PCI bus feeding an up converter mixer that led to a power amplifier and antenna The very wide frequency range was divided into a few sub bands with different analog radio technologies feeding the same analog to digital converters This has since become a standard design scheme for wideband software radios citation needed SpeakEasy phase II Edit The goal was to get a more quickly reconfigurable architecture i e several conversations at once in an open software architecture with cross channel connectivity the radio can bridge different radio protocols The secondary goals were to make it smaller cheaper and weigh less citation needed The project produced a demonstration radio only fifteen months into a three year research project This demonstration was so successful that further development was halted and the radio went into production with only a 4 MHz to 400 MHz range citation needed The software architecture identified standard interfaces for different modules of the radio radio frequency control to manage the analog parts of the radio modem control managed resources for modulation and demodulation schemes FM AM SSB QAM etc waveform processing modules actually performed the modem functions key processing and cryptographic processing managed the cryptographic functions a multimedia module did voice processing a human interface provided local or remote controls there was a routing module for network services and a control module to keep it all straight citation needed The modules are said to communicate without a central operating system Instead they send messages over the PCI computer bus to each other with a layered protocol citation needed As a military project the radio strongly distinguished red unsecured secret data and black cryptographically secured data citation needed The project was the first known to use FPGAs field programmable gate arrays for digital processing of radio data The time to reprogram these was an issue limiting application of the radio Today the time to write a program for an FPGA is still significant but the time to download a stored FPGA program is around 20 milliseconds This means an SDR could change transmission protocols and frequencies in one fiftieth of a second probably not an intolerable interruption for that task citation needed 2000s Edit The SpeakEasy SDR system in the 1994 uses a Texas Instruments TMS320C30 CMOS digital signal processor DSP along with several hundred integrated circuit chips with the radio filling the back of a truck By the late 2000s the emergence of RF CMOS technology made it practical to scale down an entire SDR system onto a single mixed signal system on a chip which Broadcom demonstrated with the BCM21551 processor in 2007 The Broadcom BCM21551 has practical commercial applications for use in 3G mobile phones 10 11 Military usage EditUnited States Edit The Joint Tactical Radio System JTRS was a program of the US military to produce radios that provide flexible and interoperable communications Examples of radio terminals that require support include hand held vehicular airborne and dismounted radios as well as base stations fixed and maritime This goal is achieved through the use of SDR systems based on an internationally endorsed open Software Communications Architecture SCA This standard uses CORBA on POSIX operating systems to coordinate various software modules The program is providing a flexible new approach to meet diverse soldier communications needs through software programmable radio technology All functionality and expandability is built upon the SCA SDRs flexibility results in expensive complexity inability to optimize slower ability to apply the latest technology and rarely a tactical user need since all users must pick and stay with the one same radio if they re to communicate The SCA despite its military origin is under evaluation by commercial radio vendors for applicability in their domains The adoption of general purpose SDR frameworks outside of military intelligence experimental and amateur uses however is inherently hampered by the fact that civilian users can more easily settle with a fixed architecture optimized for a specific function and as such more economical in mass market applications Still software defined radio s inherent flexibility can yield substantial benefits in the longer run once the fixed costs of implementing it have gone down enough to overtake the cost of iterated redesign of purpose built systems This then explains the increasing commercial interest in the technology SCA based infrastructure software and rapid development tools for SDR education and research are provided by the Open Source SCA Implementation Embedded OSSIE 12 project The Wireless Innovation Forum funded the SCA Reference Implementation project an open source implementation of the SCA specification SCARI can be downloaded for free Amateur and home use Edit nbsp Microtelecom Perseus an HF SDR for the amateur radio marketA typical amateur software radio uses a direct conversion receiver Unlike direct conversion receivers of the more distant past the mixer technologies used are based on the quadrature sampling detector and the quadrature sampling exciter 13 14 15 16 The receiver performance of this line of SDRs is directly related to the dynamic range of the analog to digital converters ADCs utilized 17 Radio frequency signals are down converted to the audio frequency band which is sampled by a high performance audio frequency ADC First generation SDRs used a 44 kHz PC sound card to provide ADC functionality The newer software defined radios use embedded high performance ADCs that provide higher dynamic range and are more resistant to noise and RF interference A fast PC performs the digital signal processing DSP operations using software specific for the radio hardware Several software radio implementations use the open source SDR library DttSP 18 The SDR software performs all of the demodulation filtering both radio frequency and audio frequency and signal enhancement equalization and binaural presentation Uses include every common amateur modulation morse code single sideband modulation frequency modulation amplitude modulation and a variety of digital modes such as radioteletype slow scan television and packet radio 19 Amateurs also experiment with new modulation methods for instance the DREAM open source project decodes the COFDM technique used by Digital Radio Mondiale There is a broad range of hardware solutions for radio amateurs and home use There are professional grade transceiver solutions e g the Zeus ZS 1 20 21 or FlexRadio 22 home brew solutions e g PicAStar transceiver the SoftRock SDR kit 23 and starter or professional receiver solutions e g the FiFi SDR 24 for shortwave or the Quadrus coherent multi channel SDR receiver 25 for short wave or VHF UHF in direct digital mode of operation RTL SDR Edit nbsp Internals of a low cost DVB T USB dongle that uses Realtek RTL2832U square IC on the right as the controller and Rafael Micro R820T square IC on the left as the tunerEric Fry discovered that some common low cost DVB T USB dongles with the Realtek RTL2832U 26 27 controller and tuner e g the Elonics E4000 or the Rafael Micro R820T 28 can be used as a wide band 3 MHz SDR receiver Experiments proved the capability of this setup to analyze Perseids meteor shower using Graves radar signals 29 This project is being maintained at Osmocom HPSDR Edit The HPSDR High Performance Software Defined Radio project uses a 16 bit 135 MSPS analog to digital converter that provides performance over the range 0 to 55 MHz comparable to that of a conventional analogue HF radio The receiver will also operate in the VHF and UHF range using either mixer image or alias responses Interface to a PC is provided by a USB 2 0 interface although Ethernet could be used as well The project is modular and comprises a backplane onto which other boards plug in This allows experimentation with new techniques and devices without the need to replace the entire set of boards An exciter provides 1 2 W of RF over the same range or into the VHF and UHF range using image or alias outputs 30 WebSDR Edit WebSDR 31 is a project initiated by Pieter Tjerk de Boer providing access via browser to multiple SDR receivers worldwide covering the complete shortwave spectrum De Boer has analyzed Chirp Transmitter signals using the coupled system of receivers 32 Other applications EditOn account of its increasing accessibility with lower cost hardware more software tools and documentation the applications of SDR have expanded past their primary and historic use cases SDR is now being used in areas such as wildlife tracking radio astronomy medical imaging research and art See also Edit nbsp Radio portal nbsp Telecommunication portalList of software defined radios List of amateur radio software Digital radio Digital signal processing DSP Radio Interface Layer RIL Softmodem Software defined mobile network SDMN Software GNSS Receiver White space radio White space database Bit bangingReferences Edit Markus Dillinger Kambiz Madani Nancy Alonistioti 2003 Software Defined Radio Architectures Systems and Functions Wiley amp Sons p xxxiii ISBN 0 470 85164 3 Amaral Cristiano 2021 Guia Moderno do Radioescuta Brazil Amazon p 333 ISBN 978 65 00 20800 9 Staple Gregory Werbach Kevin March 2004 The End of Spectrum Scarcity IEEE Spectrum 41 3 48 52 doi 10 1109 MSPEC 2004 1270548 S2CID 1667310 Ulrich Rohde N1UL Recognized for Pioneering Work on SDR https www arrl org news ulrich rohde n1ul recognized for pioneering work on sdr Johnson P May 1985 New Research Lab Leads to Unique Radio Receiver PDF E Systems Team 5 4 6 7 Mitola III J 1992 Software radios survey critical evaluation and future directions National Telesystems Conference pp 13 15 to 13 23 doi 10 1109 NTC 1992 267870 ISBN 0 7803 0554 X P Hoeher and H Lang Coded 8PSK modem for fixed and mobile satellite services based on DSP in Proc First Int Workshop on Digital Signal Processing Techniques Applied to Space Communications ESA ESTEC Noordwijk Netherlands Nov 1988 ESA WPP 006 Jan 1990 pp 117 123 First International Workshop on Software Radio Greece 1998 RJ Lackey and DW Upmal contributed the article Speakeasy The Military Software Radio to the IEEE Communications Magazine special issue that Mitola edited and for which Mitola wrote the lead article Software Radio Architecture in May 1995 Leenaerts Domine May 2010 Wide band RF CMOS circuit design techniques PDF IEEE Solid State Circuits Society Distinguished Lecturers Program SSCS DLP NXP Semiconductors Retrieved 10 December 2019 Broadcom ships 3G phone on a chip The LinuxDevices Archive 16 October 2007 Retrieved 12 December 2019 OSSIE vt edu Archived from the original on 2009 03 12 Youngblood Gerald July 2002 A Software Defined Radio for the Masses Part 1 PDF QEX American Radio Relay League 1 9 Youngblood Gerald Sep Oct 2002 A Software Defined Radio for the Masses Part 2 PDF QEX American Radio Relay League 10 18 Youngblood Gerald Nov Dec 2002 A Software Defined Radio for the Masses Part 3 PDF QEX American Radio Relay League 1 10 Youngblood Gerald Mar Apr 2003 A Software Defined Radio for the Masses Part 4 PDF QEX American Radio Relay League 20 31 Rick Lindquist Joel R Hailas October 2005 FlexRadio Systems SDR 1000 HF VHF Software Defined Radio Redux QST Retrieved 2008 12 07 DttSP on Source Forge http sourceforge net projects sdr Open source SDR transceiver project using USRP and GNU Radio ZS 1 Project ZS 1 Zeus Transceiver Flex Radio SDR Transceivers http www flex radio com SoftRock SDR Kits http wb5rvz com sdr FiFi SDR Receiver http o28 sischa net fifisdr trac Quadrus coherenet multi channel SDR receiver Using DVB USB Stick as SDR Receiver http sdr osmocom org trac wiki rtl sdr RTL SDR Blog http www rtl sdr com Support for the Rafael Micro R820T tuner in Cocoa Radio https housedillon com blog support for the rafael micro r820t tuner o cocoa radio Perseids shower using graves radar EB3FRN 7 October 2013 HPSDR Web Site WebSDR http websdr org Chirp Signals analyzed using SDR http websdr ewi utwente nl 8901 chirps Further reading EditRohde Ulrich L February 26 28 1985 Digital HF Radio A Sampling of Techniques Third International Conference on HF Communication Systems and Techniques London England Software defined radio architectures systems and functions Dillinger Madani Alonistioti Wiley 2003 454 pages ISBN 0 470 85164 3 ISBN 9780470851647 Cognitive Radio Technology Bruce Fette Elsevier Science amp Technology Books 2006 656 pags ISBN 0 7506 7952 2 ISBN 9780750679527 Software Defined Radio for 3G Burns Artech House 2002 ISBN 1 58053 347 7 Software Radio A Modern Approach to Radio Engineering Jeffrey H Reed Prentice Hall PTR 2002 ISBN 0 13 081158 0 Signal Processing Techniques for Software Radio Behrouz Farhang Beroujeny LuLu Press RF and Baseband Techniques for Software Defined Radio Peter B Kenington Artech House 2005 ISBN 1 58053 793 6 The ABC s of Software Defined Radio Martin Ewing AA6E The American Radio Relay League Inc 2012 ISBN 978 0 87259 632 0 Software Defined Radio using MATLAB amp Simulink and the RTL SDR R Stewart K Barlee D Atkinson L Crockett Strathclyde Academic Media September 2015 ISBN 978 0 9929787 2 3External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Software defined radios The world s first web based software defined receiver at the university of Twente the Netherlands Software defined receivers connected to the Internet Using software defined television tuners as multimode HF VHF UHF receivers Free SDR textbook Software Defined Radio using MATLAB amp Simulink and the RTL SDR Welcome to the World of Software Defined Radio at the Wayback Machine archived 2023 02 23 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Software defined radio amp oldid 1177810457, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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