Low probability of intercept performance bounds for spread-spectrum systems
Abstract
An important application of spread-spectrum (SS) in military communication systems is that of making the signal difficult to intercept by unauthorized receivers. Error-correction coding techniques may be employed to reduce the required input signal-to-noise ratio at the receiver, allowing the system to operate at a lower power level, hence resulting in a lower probability of interception. In the absence of error-correction coding, a specified message bit rate, transmitted signal bandwidth, and required bit-error probability at the receiver will yield a required signal-to-noise ratio for each type of spread-spectrum system. When coding is employed, a specified decoder delay time implies a specified code complexity, and can be used to determine bounds on the required receiver signal-to-noise ratio. These performance bounds are evaluated as functions of the specified parameters. In addition, one may specify a burst interference environment in that the system must operate. Presented is the evaluation of the increase in the upper bound on signal-to-noise ratio as a result of the specification of a correctable single-burst time. This increase indicates an anti-intercept/antijam tradeoff.
- Publication:
-
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
- Pub Date:
- September 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985IJSAC...3..706C
- Keywords:
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- Interception;
- Signal Transmission;
- Spread Spectrum Transmission;
- Binary Codes;
- Bursts;
- Error Correcting Codes;
- Probability Distribution Functions;
- Signal To Noise Ratios;
- Communications and Radar