Passive Microwave Repeaters

computer.rip

121 points by BallsInIt 4 days ago


scott_h - 4 days ago

Interesting stuff, I work with RF and I was curious how a passive component can have such a high gain (given that gain is usually measured as an increase in energy of a signal).

Turns out the way that the gain of a passive reflector seems to be measured is: "the ratio of the power density at a distant point due to the passive repeater to the power density which would exist at the same point" if the repeater were replaced by a matched antenna (or basically nothing at all).

So basically it's a measure of how much better the signal is when you add the reflector, and that's why it can achieve such high gains: because the signals traveling so far are already being atmospherically attenuated by hundreds of dB. Maybe that's not new information to others.

Anyways, cool stuff. Sometimes the best solutions are the simplest.

http://www.gbppr.net/splat/Passive-Repeater-Engineering.pdf#...

Catbert59 - 4 days ago

Still used nowadays: airplane reflections are being used by ham radio dudes. There's a software around that even calculates the optimal reflection parameters based on ADS-B aggregators.

Thanks too relatively modern digital modes this doesn't need too much transmission power.

On the upper GHz bands with dishes they even manage to do reliable FM chats. But that requires a lot of gain and active steering of the dish.

jauntywundrkind - 4 days ago

Very topical item, with NISAR unfurling to it's full 39 foot deployment up in space.

https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/giant-radar-antenna-reflector-...

perihelions - 4 days ago

Also briefly attempted in space in the 1960's,

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Echo

Radio astronomy was an accidental offshoot of this project: they noticed the reflected microwave signals from space came back with some extra noise...

gusfoo - 19 hours ago

> The cavity magnetron, one of the first practical microwave transmitters, was an invention of such import that it was the UK's key contribution to a technical partnership that lead to the UK's access to US nuclear weapons research.

No, that's not correct at all. The Tube Alloys project[0] was the key, codified in the Quebec Agreement[1], giving the USA access to UK nuclear weapons research.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tube_Alloys [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quebec_Agreement

It is an item of some irritation to me that many people think the USA was the nation which started nuclear weapons development first. "In July 1940, Britain had offered to give the United States access to its research, and the Tizard Mission's John Cockcroft briefed American scientists on British developments. He discovered that the American project was smaller than the British, and not as advanced."

keane - 11 hours ago

A passive mirror for LTE installed in 2016 and currently in use in Argentina:

https://www.reddit.com/r/cellmapper/comments/1h4i1cl/passive...

HocusLocus - a day ago

Shown are reflectors. Two dishes back to back is possible too. Our telco had such an array on top of a mountain to jump over it.

jonah - a day ago

In theory this works with VHF frequencies as well using high-gain antennas (i.e. Yagi or dish).