UPDATED research description

0162-EX-PL-2014 Text Documents

The MITRE Corporation

2014-02-25ELS_146256

                         TECHNICAL EXHIBIT
      AMENDMENT TO PENDING EXPERIMENTAL FCC LICENSE APPLICATION
                         The MITRE Corporation

The MITRE Corporation is seeking an FCC Experimental License to transmit data within the
High Frequency (“HF”) band between 2 MHz and 16 MHz. This Exhibit describes the program
of research and experimentation proposed, including: description of equipment and theory of
operation; the specific objectives sought to be accomplished; and how the program of
experimentation has a reasonable promise of contribution to the development, extension,
expansion or utilization of the radio art and/or is along lines not already investigated.

Research and Experimentation Program Description

Assured beyond line-of-sight (BLOS) communications is a challenging problem yet essential for
our warfighters. Military and civilian systems rely on a combination of high data rate satellite
connectivity as well as low data rate HF Sky Wave communications. While satellite
communication provides high data rate connectivity, there are vulnerabilities that include
degradation and disruption of service. HF radio communication generally are limited to
narrower bandwidths and lower data rates than satellite communications. To ensure critical
communications are maintained, we are investigating the capability of higher bandwidth and
higher data rate communications in the HF band applying polarization diversity MIMO concepts.

Long distance HF communication is accomplished via reflection of HF radio waves off the
ionosphere, a variable medium. This introduces challenges that must be overcome in order to
make HF communications more reliable. These include multipath propagation and polarization
rotation; both contribute to signal fades.

We will demonstrate reliable BLOS HF communications at high data rates.

Objectives

The goal is to communicate reliably at a rate of 1-4 bits/Hz/s. We will develop a 100-kHz
bandwidth waveform to achieve ~ 256 kbps with forward error correction (FEC) coding.
Mitigation of signal fading and improved throughput will be accomplished using polarization
diversity techniques and orthogonal coded waveform designs. Future year goals include
investigating small antennas for mobility applications.

The research program is planned to include a series of over-the-air (OTA) MIMO
demonstrations, each testing new waveforms. We will attempt to test whether we can use both X
and O modes to carry independent communications channels and then determine the carrying
capability of each at different bandwidths. A stretch goal is to extend to wider bandwidth
waveforms, up to 1 MHz. (Researchers’ note: we understand that this wideband waveform may
run up against other users and possibly cause interference. We plan to transmit at as low a power




                                      The MITRE Corporation
                              202 Burlington Road, Bedford MA 01730


FCC Office of Engineering and Technology (OET)
Page 2


as possible and on a not-to-interfere basis. Please see red-highlighted text in Table (1a) ). We
will also perform ionospheric sounding for channel characterization.

The requested frequencies and transmission operational parameters are those permitted under
Section 90.266 of the Commission’s Rules, Long Distance Communications on Frequencies
below 25 MHz and are identified specifically in the FCC’s Electronic Code of Federal
Regulations, Title 47 (Telecommunication), Volume 1, Chapter 1, Part 2.106 Table of Frequency
Allocations. These frequencies bands requested are designed to avoid the Restricted Bands of
Operation outlines in the Electronic Code of Federal Regulations, Title 47 (Telecommunication),
Part 15 (Radio Frequency Devices), Subpart C Intentional Radiators.

Listed in the following Tables (1a) and (1b) are the requested proposed technical parameters for
the experimental research program.


FCC Office of Engineering and Technology (OET)
Page 3


Crossed Dipole (Signal) Transmit Antenna
              Transmitter Site Locations Transmitter Site #1
                                         The MITRE Corporation
                                         202 Burlington Road, Bedford, MA 01730
                                         42-30-11.6N, 71-14-14.3W
                                         Crossed Dipole Antenna Radiation Center: 25 ft AGL
                                         Crossed Dipole (signal) Transmit Antenna Azimuth Orientation: omnidirectional
                                         Crossed Dipole (signal) Transmit Antenna Vertical Plane Orientation: N/A
                                         Transmitter Site #2
                                         16-30 Einhorn Road, Worcester, MA 01609
                                         42-16-19.9N, 71-48-38.2W
                                         Antenna Configuration same as Transmitter Site # 1
                                         Transmitter Site #3
                                         Gateway Park, Worcester, MA 01609
                                         42-16-28.6N, 71-47-55.3W
                                         Antenna Configuration same as Transmitter Site # 1
                                         Transmitter Site #4
                                         5251 Burleson Road, Oneida, NY 13421
                                         43-01-55.5N, 75-39-10.2W
                                         Antenna Configuration same as Transmitter Site # 1
                                         Transmitter Site #5
                                         525 Brooks Road, Rome, NY 13441
                                         43-13-20.8N, 75-24-32.7W
                                         Antenna Configuration same as Transmitter Site # 1
      Requested Frequency ranges (kHz) 2500.0 - 4100.0, 4210.0 - 6210.0, 6320.0 - 8250.0, 8450.0 - 12200.0, 13500.0 - 16000.0
                                         (Daytime: 5-14 MHz using only groupings above)
                                         (Nightime: 3-7 MHz using only groupings above)
             Maximum Transmit Power 200 Watts (average varies between 50 and 200 Watts)
                             Transmitter Ettus USRP N210 Software Defined Radio
                  Transmitting Antenna MITRE-built Crossed-Dipole (see Figure 1a)
                                         Broadband bow-tie shaped, inverted vee-dipoles with resistive loading
                                         Small Footprint (< 30 meter diameter)




                                      Dipoles are arranged orthogonally on mast to produce x-,y- polarizations
                                      1 MHz (vary from 100 kHz up to 1 MHz) ** 1 MHz is a stretch goal and will be done on
       Maximum Occupied Bandwidth a not-to-intefere basis. Most work will be done around 100-300 kHz.
                                      Experiments may run for 24 hours once a month, shorter times a few days a month
Maximum Transmit Time Duration (Duty) (hours). Duty cycle is 100% during experiments.
          Table 1a. Proposed Experimental Crossed-Dipole Transmission Parameters

Please note that, while there are 5 possible transmit locations listed in Table (1a) above, only
three will be used at any given time. Transmitter sites 2 and 5 serve as back-up sites. Our team
performed the SLOPE test for each site (1 through 5) and every site passed without needing to
register the antenna. Documentation on the Slope Test can be provided if needed.


FCC Office of Engineering and Technology (OET)
Page 4


The MITRE-developed Crossed-Dipole antenna configuration and dimensions are shown in
Figure 1a below.




                Figure 1a. Model Crossed Dipole Antenna (< 30m diameter)


FCC Office of Engineering and Technology (OET)
Page 5


Monocone (Sounder) Transmit Antenna
             Transmitter Site Locations Transmitter Site #1
                                        The MITRE Corporation
                                        202 Burlington Road, Bedford, MA 01730
                                        42-30-11.6N, 71-14-14.3W
                                        Monocone Antenna Radiation Center: 0 ft AGL
                                        Monocone (sounding) Transmit Antenna Azimuth Orientation: omnidirectional
                                        Monocone (sounding) Transmit Antenna Vertical Plane Orientation: N/A
                                        Transmitter Site #2
                                        16-30 Einhorn Road, Worcester, MA 01609
                                        42-16-19.9N, 71-48-38.2W
                                        Antenna Configuration same as Transmitter Site # 1
                                        Transmitter Site #3
                                        Gateway Park, Worcester, MA 01609
                                        42-16-28.6N, 71-47-55.3W
                                        Antenna Configuration same as Transmitter Site # 1
                                        Transmitter Site #4
                                        5251 Burleson Road, Oneida, NY 13421
                                        43-01-55.5N, 75-39-10.2W
                                        Antenna Configuration same as Transmitter Site # 1
                                        Transmitter Site #5
                                        525 Brooks Road, Rome, NY 13441
                                        43-13-20.8N, 75-24-32.7W
                                        Antenna Configuration same as Transmitter Site # 1

                                            2500.0 - 4100.0, 4210.0 - 6210.0, 6320.0 - 8250.0, 8450.0 - 12200.0, 13500.0 - 16000.0
                                            (Daytime: 5-14 MHz using only groupings above)
        Requested Frequency Range (kHz)     (Nightime: 3-7 MHz using only groupings above)
               Maximum Transmit Power       10 Watts
                              Transmitter   Ettus USRP N210 Software Defined Radio
                    Transmitting Antenna    MITRE-built Monocone (see Figure 1b)
                                            Broadband monocone antenna with low-loww matching network
                                            Uses 15-meter-long radial wires
                                            Small Footprint (< 30 meter-diameter radial wires)
           Maximum Occupied Bandwidth       5 kHz
                                            During the experiments referenced in Table 1a, the sounder will send a repeating 5-
                                            kHz-wide chirp waveform that scans the entire 2.5-16 MHz frequency band
                                            continuously during a 24 hour period (or several hours for shorter experiments). As
                                            described in Table 1a, the 24-hour experiments will occur about once per month,
  Maximum Transmit Time Duration (Duty)     shorter times a few days a month (hours).
             Table 1b. Proposed Experimental Monocone Transmission Parameters

The MITRE-developed Monocone antenna configuration and dimensions are shown in Figure 1b
below.


FCC Office of Engineering and Technology (OET)
Page 6




 Figure 1b. Model Monocone Antenna (note top and bottom parts of figure are not to scale with
                                     one another).

The model of the fully integrated experimental system is shown in Figure 2, with wires
highlighted. The system supports three orthogonal polarizations: two inverted vee-dipoles (x-, y-
polarized), and one vertical monocone (z-polarized). The antenna elements are well matched
over 4-10 MHz to 50 ohms and offset to avoid mutual coupling effects. The antennas exhibit
omnidirectional antenna patterns with an antenna gain of > -7 dBi at 4 MHz and > 0 dBi above 7
MHz. The system is simple, low-cost and MITRE-fabricated, -assembled, and –setup.




           Figure 2. Model of fully integrated experimental system, wires highlighted.


FCC Office of Engineering and Technology (OET)
Page 7


Figure 3 shows a picture of the fully integrated antenna system; wires are highlighted so they are
                                              visible.




   Figure 3. Picture of fully integrated experimental system, wires highlighted for visibility.


While MITRE fabricated the antennas and designed the transmit and receive systems, some of
the equipment was purchased from commercial vendors. Figure 4 shows a wiring diagram of the
transmission system and the Table 2 that follows lists the commercially purchased equipment
that will be used during the experiment(s).


FCC Office of Engineering and Technology (OET)
Page 8




                       Figure 4. Transmission equipment wiring diagram.


                 Table 2. Commercially purchased transmission equipment list.


                                  Transmitting Equipment
           Manufacturer         Model Number       No. of Units         Experimental (Y/N)
             Ettus USRP             N210       9 (3 sites x 3 radios)           N
          Mini Circuits 15542    ZHL-5W-1      9 (3 sites x 3 radios)           N
                                                up to 12 (3 sites x
            BAE Australia        TBD - 50 W MAX 200W per site)                  N

Research and Experimentation Contribution to the Development of the Radio Art

Assured beyond line-of-sight communications is a challenging problem yet essential for certain
types of communication. Fortunately, HF technology is uniquely suited to address this problem,


FCC Office of Engineering and Technology (OET)
Page 9


applying new techniques and understanding of the ionosphere. With HF, BLOS communications
is achievable without the use of satellites or psuedo-lites. The traditionally low data rates can be
improved upon as well. In today's economic climate, HF is very affordable, with a well-
established commercial market.

MITRE's work will demonstrate a new approach to addressing critical communications
capability shortfalls through the application of polarization diversity and advanced orthogonal
coding designs.

If there are any technical questions with the proposed application please contact one of the
undersigned.




                                              Maureen Scheible

                                              The MITRE Corporation
                                              26 Electronic Parkway
                                              Rome, NY 13441

                                              February 17, 2014



                                              Lucien Teig

                                              The MITRE Corporation
                                              202 Burlington Road
                                              Bedford, MA 01730

                                              February 17, 2014



Document Created: 2014-02-25 16:43:58
Document Modified: 2014-02-25 16:43:58

© 2024 FCC.report
This site is not affiliated with or endorsed by the FCC