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91results about How to "Reduced bandwidth" patented technology

Header compression scheme

A method of reducing the bandwidth required to send traffic comprising a payload and a header originating in a first communications network over another communications network. The traffic is characterized by having header information from which a path from its source to destination can be predetermined, the method comprising: determining redundant header information which is not used for forwarding the traffic in the other network; replacing at least part or all of the redundant header information with compression information having a smaller bandwidth than the replaced header information; appending header information to the traffic to enable forwarding along the path in the other network to an egress node; at the egress node, processing the traffic to remove the appended header information and restore the replaced header information by removing the compression information and using the compression information to perform a look-up operation which retrieves the replaced redundant header information from a data store, wherein the same compression information is used to replace the same redundant header information for all the traffic having the same predetermined path; compression information comprising a dummy header data structure which conforms to a communications protocol arranged to be identifiable by traffic type in a carrier frame.
Owner:BRITISH TELECOMM PLC

Micro movement pulsed radar system and method of phase noise compensation

A pulsed radar system uses phase noise compensation to reduce phase noise due to drift of the reference oscillator to enable detection of micro movements and particularly human motion such as walking, breathing or heartbeat. The noise level due to A / D sampling must be sufficiently low for the phase noise compensation to be effective. As this is currently beyond state-of-the-art for high bandwidth A / D converters used in traditional receiver design, the receiver is suitably reconfigured to use analog range gates and narrowband A / D sampling having sufficiently low noise level. As technology continues to improve, the phase compensation techniques may be directly applicable to the high bandwidth A / D samples in traditional receiver designs. Whether phase compensation is applied to traditional receiver designs or a receiver configured with analog range gates, the steps are essentially the same: data is processed to position a reference range bin (either an analog range gate or a particular time sample) on a stationary reference and the phase variation of that reference range bin is used to compensate the phase of target data in range bins (either an ensemble of range gates or other time samples) near the stationary reference. This effectively moves the radar system and particularly the reference oscillator to the stationary reference thereby greatly reducing oscillator drift and phase noise and decoupling the stand-off range from the level of phase noise.
Owner:RAYTHEON CO

Micro movement pulsed radar system and method of phase noise compensation

A pulsed radar system uses phase noise compensation to reduce phase noise due to drift of the reference oscillator to enable detection of micro movements and particularly human motion such as walking, breathing or heartbeat. The noise level due to A / D sampling must be sufficiently low for the phase noise compensation to be effective. As this is currently beyond state-of-the-art for high bandwidth A / D converters used in traditional receiver design, the receiver is suitably reconfigured to use analog range gates and narrowband A / D sampling having sufficiently low noise level. As technology continues to improve, the phase compensation techniques may be directly applicable to the high bandwidth A / D samples in traditional receiver designs. Whether phase compensation is applied to traditional receiver designs or a receiver configured with analog range gates, the steps are essentially the same: data is processed to position a reference range bin (either an analog range gate or a particular time sample) on a stationary reference and the phase variation of that reference range bin is used to compensate the phase of target data in range bins (either an ensemble of range gates or other time samples) near the stationary reference. This effectively moves the radar system and particularly the reference oscillator to the stationary reference thereby greatly reducing oscillator drift and phase noise and decoupling the stand-off range from the level of phase noise.
Owner:RAYTHEON CO
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