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nosnowtho OP t1_j5ff39a wrote

I'm starting to see how and why this is done. The signal processing opens up many possibilities and capabilities. Thank you.

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Prestigious_Carpet29 t1_j5ftbtr wrote

(Digital) Signal-processing is a very broad field, but very powerful and important in modern communications systems.

As examples, you get audio signal-processing for lossy compression (bit-rate-reduction) and echo-cancellation and speech-recognition, and signal processing of radiofrequency signals in any "digital"-mode transmitter or receiver such as mobile phone or DAB radio or digital-TV (take a deep breath and look up OFDM :-) ).

It's amazing how Fourier transforms invented (or perhaps "discovered") by Joseph Fourier 200 years ago are at the heart of so much of modern technology.

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hatsune_aru t1_j5nwarb wrote

One more concept to realize is that since antennas are passive devices, they have to be reciprocal. In other words, radiation that goes through a reciprocal system has to work the same way forwards and backwards. In simpler words, if you imagine transmitting through the antenna and looking at the radiation pattern from far away--that antenna behaves exactly the same when the radiation shows up from far away receiving into the antenna--it behaves the same in transmission and reception.

Each phased array antenna element can be thought of as a radiator, and if its an active array, the radiating element can be thought of having a tuneable amplitude and phase. And the combined radiation pattern of the array is a superposition of all the individual elements.

When you have that kind of control, you can change the far-field radiation pattern by adding delays and changing the amplitude to tune the radiation pattern. It's quite ingenious actually.

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