RECEIVER TYPES AND CHARACTERISTICS
Besides the considerations of noise and noise figure, the capabilities of receivers are highly dependant on the type of receiver design. Most receiver designs are trade-offs of several conflicting requirements. This is especially true of the Electronic Support Measures (ESM) receivers used in Electronic Warfare. This section consists of a figure and tables that provide a brief comparison of various common ESM receiver types. Figure 1 shows block diagrams of four common ESM receivers. Table 1 is a comparison of major features of receivers. Table 2 shows the receiver types best suited for various types of signals and Tables 3 and 4 compare several direction of arrival (DOA) and emitter location techniques. Table 5 shows qualitative and quantitative comparisons of receiver characteristics.
CRYSTAL VIDEO RECEIVER
RF AMPLIFIER COMPRESSIVE VIDEO AMPLIFIER BAND 1 VIDEO BAND 2 VIDEO BAND 3 VIDEO
YIG TUNED NARROWBAND SUPERHET
IF AMP YIG FILTER TUNING IF FILTER LOG VIDEO AMP VIDEO
YIG OSCILLATOR
WIDEBAND SUPERHET
INSTANTANEOUS FREQUENCY MEASUREMENT
SIN WIDEBAND FILTER IF FILTER LIMITING AMPLIFIER DELAY LINE PHASE DETECTOR COS VIDEO CONVERSION FREQUENCY INFORMATION
FIXED FREQUENCY OSCILLATOR
Figure 1. Common ESM Receiver Block Diagrams
5-3.1
Table 1. Comparison of Major Features of Receivers Receiver
Wideband crystal video Turned RF Crystal Video IFM
Advantages
Simple, inexpensive, instantaneous, High POI in frequency range Simple, Frequency measurement Higher sensitivity than wideband Relatively simple Frequency resolution Instantaneous, high POI High sensitivity Good frequency resolution Simultaneous signals don't interfere Better response time and POI Wide bandwidth, Near instantaneous, Moderate frequency resolution Near instantaneous, Good resolution and dynamic range, Good simultaneous signal capability Near instantaneous, Good resolution, Good simultaneous signal capability Good POI
Disadvantages
No frequency resolution Poor sensitivity and Poor simultaneous signal performance Slow response time Poor POI Cannot sort simultaneous signals Relatively poor sensitivity Slow response time Poor POI Poor against frequency agility Spurious signals generated Poorer sensitivity High complexity, cost; Lower reliability; limited sensitivity High complexity, Limited bandwidth No pulse modulation information Critical alignment High complexity; new technology
Principal Applications
RWR
Option in RWR, Frequency measurement in hybrid Shipboard ESM, Jammer power management, SIGINT equipment SIGINT equipment Air and ship ESM Analysis part of hybrid Shipboard ESM Tactical air warning SIGINT equipment Jammer power management SIGINT equipment Applications for fine freq analysis over wide range
Narrow-band scanning Superhet Wide-band Superhet Channelized Microscan
Acousto-optic
Table 2. Receiver Types vs. Signal Types Receiver Type Signal Type
CW Wide-Band Crystal Video Special design for CW Yes No TRF Crystal Video Special design for CW Yes No IFM Yes, but interferes with pulsed reception Yes No Narrow-Band Superhet Yes Wide-Band Superhet Yes Channelized Yes Microscan Yes Acousto-optic Yes
Pulsed Multiple Frequency Frequency Agile PRI Agile Chirped
Yes Yes, but won't recognize as same source No
Yes No
Yes Yes
Yes Yes
Yes Yes
Yes, doesn't measure frequency Yes
No
Yes
Yes (within passband) Yes
Yes
Yes
No/Yes, depending on readout time No/Yes, depending on readout time Yes (reduced sensitivity) Yes (reduced sensitivity)
Yes
Yes
No/Yes, depending on scan rate No/Yes, depending on BW No
Yes
No/Yes, imprecision in TOA No/Yes, depending on scan rate Yes (reduced sensitivity)
Yes, within acceptance BW Yes, within acceptance BW
No
Yes
Yes
Yes (reduced sensitivity) Yes (reduced sensitivity)
Spread Spectrum
No
Yes
No/Yes, depending on BW
5-3.2
Table 3. Direction of Arrival Measurement Techniques Amplitude Comparison
Sensor Configuration DF Accuracy Typically 4 to 6 Equal Spaced Antenna Elements for 360E Coverage
Phase Interferometer
2 or more RHC or LHC Spirals in Fixed Array
DFACC .
12 bW )C dB 24 S
DFACC .
8 )2 2 B d cos2
(Gaussian Antenna Shape) DF Accuracy Improvement Typical DF Accuracy Sensitivity to Multipath/Reflections Platform Constraints Applicable Receivers Decrease Antenna BW; Decrease Amplitude Mistrack; Increase Squint Angle 3E to 10E rms High Sensitivity; Mistrack of Several dB Can Cause Large DF Errors Locate in Reflection Free Area Crystal Video; Channelizer; Acousto-Optic; Compressive; Superheterodyne Increase Spacing of Outer Antennas; Decrease Phase Mistrack 0.1E to 3E rms Relatively Insensitive; Interferometer Can be Made to Tolerate Large Phase Errors Reflection Free Area; Real Estate for Array; Prefers Flat Radome Superheterodyne
)CdB= Amplitude Monopulse Ratio in dB S= Squint Angle in degrees 2BW= Antenna Beamwidth in degrees
Table 4. Emitter Location Techniques Measurement Technique Triangulation Advantages Single Aircraft Disadvantages Non-instantaneous location Inadequate accuracy for remote targeting Not forward looking Azimuth/elevation Single Aircraft Instantaneous location possible Time Difference of Arrival Very high precision (Pulsed signals) Can support weapon delivery position requirements Very rapid, can handle short on-time threat Accuracy degrades rapidly at low altitude Function of range Very complex, diverse systems required, at least 3 aircraft High quality receivers, DME (3 sites) very wideband data link Very high performance control processor; requires very high reliability subsystems
5-3.3
Table 5. Qualitative Comparison of Receivers
Receiver Type Feature
Instantaneous Analysis Bandwidth Frequency Resolution Sensitivity Dynamic Range Speed of Acquisition Short pulse Width Capability Retention of Signal Characteristics Applicability to Exotic Signals High signal Density Performance Simultaneous Signal Capability Processing Complexity Immunity to Jamming Power Requirements RF Range (GHz) Max Instantaneous Analysis Bandwidth Frequency Accuracy Wide-Band Crystal Video Very wide Very poor Poor (No preamp) Fair (preamp) Fair Very Fast Good TRF Crystal Video Narrow Fair Fair/ good Fair/ good Slow Good IFM Very wide Good Poor (No preamp) Fair (preamp) Good Very Fast Good Narrow-Band Superhet Narrow Very good Very good Very good Slow Good Wide-Band Superhet Moderate Poor Fair Fair Fast Very good Fair/ good Fair/ good Channelized
From NRL Report 8737
Microscan
Acousto-optic
Wide Fair Fair/ good Good Very Fast Good
Wide Good Very good Fair Very Fast Fair
Moderate Good Good Poor Fast Fair
Fair
Fair
Poor
Good
Good
Poor
Fair/ good Fair/ good
Poor/ fair Poor (high false alarm rate from background) Poor Moderate depending on application Poor Low Multioctave (0.5-40) Multioctave (to 17.5 GHz)
Poor
Good
Poor
Good
Fair/ good
Fair/ good Fair/ good Moderate depending on application Fair Low/ Moderate 0.15-18 separate As high as desired with equivalent reduction in resolution
Good
Poor
Fair/good, Fair depending on (depending on architecture BW) & processing Fair (depending on BW) Moderate Poor/ Fair Moderate Good Low-high depending on architecture Good High
Good
Poor
Poor
Good
Good
Good Simple signal processing complex data processing Good Moderate/ High 0.5-4 (0.5-18 channelized and down conversion)
Moderate Poor/ Fair Moderate
Moderate
Complex
Good Moderate
Good Moderate
>0.5 to 40
<0.01 to 40
0.5 to 18
0.5 to 60 ~2 GHz without degradation, 17.5 GHz with degradation 1 MHz
<0.5 to 8
Multioctave (1 octave per unit)
50 MHz
500 MHz
0.5 to 2 depending on PW limitation
1 GHz
Measurement Measurement accuracy no accuracy no better than better than analysis BW analysis BW
5-10 MHz
0.5% to 1%
0.5 to 3 MHz
10 KHz
1 MHz
5-3.4
Receiver Type Feature
Pulse Width Range Frequency Resolution Sensitivity (dBm) Maximum Dynamic Range (dB) Tuning Time Signal ID Time Minimum Weight (lb) Size / Minimum Volume (in) Minimum Power (W) Cost Wide-Band Crystal Video CW to 50 ns ~400 MHz (no better than BW) -40 to -50 (no preamp) -80 (with preamp) 70 TRF Crystal Video CW to 50 ns 25 MHz Better than -80 with preamp 70-80 IFM Narrow-Band Superhet Wide-Band Superhet Channelized Microscan CW to 250 ns 1 MHz Acousto-optic CW to 0.5 s 0.5 to 1 MHz
CW to ~20 ns CW to 100 ns CW to 4 ns CW to 30 ns (depending with 20 MHz with 500 MHz (depending on resolution) resolution resolution on resolution) 1 MHz -40 (no preamp) -75 (preamp) 4 GHz BW 80 (w/preamp) 100+ (saturated) 2-10 ms <20 (octave unit) 65-75 (full coverage) Sm/Moderate 600-1000 ~100 miniaturized ~50 (octave unit) Moderate <0.1 MHz 100-500 MHz -80, 500 MHz BW 10-125 MHz (less with freq vernier) -70, 10-50 MHz BW
-90, 1 MHz BW
-90, 5-10 MHz BW
-70 to -80
90 1.0 s (1 octave) ~0.1 s
60 .12 s (200 MHz band) 35 (tuner only) Moderate Several thousand 150 (tuner only) Moderate/ High
50-80
40-60 0.3 s LO scan time ~1 s
25-35 0.5 ms (integration time) -
100 ns 20 (with processor) Small 300 (w/processor) 100 (with processor) <10 without processor Low
50 ms 50 ms
2.10ms 1309-200 for 0.5 to 18 GHz coverage Large 4000-8000 (0.5-18 GHz coverage 350 to 1200 for 0.5 to 18 GHz coverage High
30
60-75
25
29-55
Small 375
Moderate 1500-3000
Moderate 1200-2000
Small 800-1900
60 (without processor) Low/ Moderate
150 Moderate/ High
70-80 Moderate/ High
200 Low/ Moderate
5-3.5