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			52 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
			
		
	
	
			52 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
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								// Status=review
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								JT65 was designed for making minimal QSOs via EME (``moon-bounce'') on
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								the VHF and UHF bands. A detailed description of the protocol and its
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								implementation in program _WSJT_ was published in {jt65protocol} for
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								September-October, 2005. Briefly stated, JT65 uses 60 s T/R sequences
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								and carefully structured messages. Standard messages are compressed so
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								that two callsigns and a grid locator can be transmitted in just 71
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								information bits.  A 72^nd^ bit serves as a flag to indicate that a
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								message consists of arbitrary text (up to 13 characters) instead of
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								callsigns and a grid locator.  Special formats allow other information
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								such as add-on callsign prefixes (e.g., ZA/K1ABC) or numerical signal
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								reports (in dB) to be substituted for the grid locator. The basic aim
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								is to compress the most common messages used for minimally valid QSOs
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								into a minimum fixed number of bits. After compression, a Reed Solomon
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								(63,12) error-control code converts 72-bit user messages into
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								sequences of 63 six-bit channel symbols.
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								JT65 requires tight synchronization of time and frequency between
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								transmitting and receiving stations. Each transmission is divided into
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								126 contiguous time intervals or symbols of length 4096/11025 = 0.372
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								s. Within each interval the waveform is a constant-amplitude sinusoid
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								at one of 65 pre-defined frequencies. Frequency steps between
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								intervals are accomplished in a phase-continuous manner. Half of the
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								channel symbols are devoted to a pseudo-random synchronizing vector
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								interleaved with the encoded information symbols. The sync vector
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								allows calibration of time and frequency offsets between transmitter
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								and receiver. A transmission nominally begins at t = 1 s after the
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								start of a UTC minute and finishes at t = 47.8 seconds. The
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								synchronizing tone is at 11025 × 472/4096 = 1270.46 Hz, and is normally
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								sent in each interval having a “1” in the following pseudo-random
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								sequence:
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								 100110001111110101000101100100011100111101101111000110101011001
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								 101010100100000011000000011010010110101010011001001000011111111
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								Encoded user information is transmitted during the 63 intervals not
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								used for the sync tone. Each channel symbol generates a tone at
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								frequency 11025 × 472/4096 + 11025/4096 × (N+2) × m, where N is the
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								value of the six-bit symbol, 0 ≤ N ≤ 63, and m is 1, 2, or 4 for JT65
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								sub-modes A, B, or C.  Sub-mode JT65A is always used at HF.
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								For EME (but, conventionally, not on the HF bands) the signal report
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								OOO is sometimes used instead of numerical signal reports. It is
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								conveyed by reversing sync and data positions in the transmitted
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								sequence.  Shorthand messages for RO, RRR, and 73 dispense with the
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								sync vector entirely and use time intervals of 16384/11025 = 1.486 s
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								for pairs of alternating tones. The lower frequency is always 1270.46
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								Hz, the same as that of the sync tone, and the frequency separation is
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								110250/4096 = 26.92 Hz multiplied by n × m, with n = 2, 3, 4 for the
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								messages RO, RRR, and 73.
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