US1762984A - Secret-communicating system - Google Patents

Secret-communicating system Download PDF

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US1762984A
US1762984A US310966A US31096628A US1762984A US 1762984 A US1762984 A US 1762984A US 310966 A US310966 A US 310966A US 31096628 A US31096628 A US 31096628A US 1762984 A US1762984 A US 1762984A
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band
frequency
cycles per
frequencies
bands
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US310966A
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Raymond A Heising
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AT&T Corp
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Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04KSECRET COMMUNICATION; JAMMING OF COMMUNICATION
    • H04K1/00Secret communication
    • H04K1/04Secret communication by frequency scrambling, i.e. by transposing or inverting parts of the frequency band or by inverting the whole band

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to the secret transmission and reception of electrical current Waves for signaling at speech or radio frequencies.
  • An object of the invention is to enable a message to be rendered unintelligible when received by the ordinary receiving apparatus, or special apparatus when the receiving operator is unfamiliar with the secret method of l0 transmission in detail.
  • a higher degree of secrecy is obtainable than in the above systems by varying at times the extreme frequency limits in' the frequency scale of the sub-bands while maintaining a constant width message band for impressing on the transmitting equipment.
  • Either a band of constant width may .be selected from the range of message frequency currents or the entire band may be impressed on the system, the reduction to any constant desirable range being made somewhere within the system.
  • this invention provides for shifting the entire band of waves that are destined to be treated in the manner referred to above or disclosed in the F letcher'or Chesshifting the sub-bands and inverting the fre- 3 secrecy. On the basis of the frequencles above given, the original band will be shifted 100v cycles up or down respectively in the fre.
  • the time intervals for shifting may be made any desired length and synchronized with the changes in combinations of the sub-bands. This is especially advantageous because it prevents anyone who may have been able to set his beating oscillators lto one particular sub-band which is transmitting suflicient energy at the proper frequencies to make it intelligible, to know where to set them to continue picking up this one band.
  • Modulator circuit A of the well known balanced type, is supplied from an oscillator 5 with any desired modulating frequency through transformers 6 and 7.
  • the signalformer 14 and is impressed on the grids of the tubes of the modulator' B.
  • the modulator B is supplied through transformers 15 with various modulating frequencies from oscillator 17 the output frequency of which is controlled by keys 18, 19 and 20. These keys cause the actuation of relays 22, 23 and 24, respectively, through a battery 25 which permit the addition or subtraction of condensers 26, 27 and 28, respectively, to and from the tuned control circuit of the oscillator 17.
  • the output from the modulator B is impressed through transformer 30 on the subdivided circuits of the system shown in portion C.
  • the signaling frequencies pass through the low pass filters F1 having a 3000 cycle cut-o, and into four channels A, B C
  • modulators M, MD, MC and D which are supplied with carrier frequencies from oscillators OA, OB, OC and OD of 7 600,
  • the resistances R are employed to match the impedances of the channels with the impedance of the input transformer 30.
  • the signaling band passes through band lters Fe with the common range of 8000 to 8550 cycles per second.
  • the bands are thus reduced to a common frequency level but, of course, taken from different parts of the signaling band.
  • These bands are then interchanged in the frequen'cy spectrum in any desirable combination by the switching apparatus at S which is identical with that shown in Patent No. 1,725,032, issued Aug. 20, 1929, on C. L. Weiss, Jr., application, Serial No. 203,703, filed July 6, 1927.
  • the demodulators DA, DD, C and DD supplied from oscillators OA', OD, OC and OD' with frequencies of 7600 Y or 8950 cycles per second from oscillator OA' frequencies of 7050 or 9500 cyles per second from oscillator OD', 6500 or 10,050 cycles per second from oscillator OC' and 5950 or.10,600 cycles per second from oscillator OB'.
  • the bands nextpass through filter F2 having the same cut-oft as filter F1 into band filters F A, 15B, FC and FD passing bands of frequencies from 4:00 to 950 cycles per second, 950 to 1500 cycles per second, 1500 to 2050 cycles per second and 2050 to 2600 cycles per second, respectively.
  • Compensatingfilter CF of the type disclosed in Mills Patent 1,616,193 of February 1, 1927 aids the transmission through filters FA, FD, FC and FD at the cutoff points. A band of frequencies from 400 to 2600 cycles per second is thus put on the line for distance transmission.
  • the 200 to 5100 cycle per second side band is the original 100 to 5,000 cycle per second signaling band, except that it has been shifted 100 cycles. Considering an intermediate frequency of 1000 'cycles per second in the original band this frequency now lies at a 1100 cycles per second frequency level.
  • the band impressed on the lters F1 will be 100 to 5000 cycles per second or the original range. If the key 20 produces a demodulating frequency of 6100 cycles per second, then a resulting side band will be from 0 to 4900 cycles per second and a frequency which Was originally 1000 cycles per second now lies at a frequency level of 900 cycles per second. As the keys 18, 19 and 20 are thus manipulated, the original signaling band Will be shifted 100 cycles per second in either direction before impression on the filter F1 or impressed on these filters at their original level.
  • the filters F1 pass the signaling band of frequencies from zero to 3000, which are modulated and reduced to four bands havin cycles per second as described in the R. W. Chesnut patent referred to above. If the original 1000 cycles per second frequency is modulated in MD, it will be shifted to 8050 cycles per second,y and will, if demodulated in DD by a frequency of 6500 cycles per second, be' shifted to 1550 cycles per second and transmitted at this frequency. When key 18 is closed therefore the 1000 cycles per second frequency will be transmitted vat 1650 cycles and when key 20 is closed it is transmitted at 1450 cycles assuming the same conditions 1n the switching circuits S.. A similar operation, of course, occurs for all the frequencles transmitted so that no frequencies or band of frequencies remains natural or in any o ne position suiiciently long to permit of its 1ntelligible reception.
  • Frequency shifts of 200 or 300 cycles per second may also be made in the modulator in any desired order and rapidity. Thls shifting of the entire band, together with the shifting and inversion of the sub-bands of the system in portion C provides a secrecy g the common frequency range of 8000 to 8500 -on transformers 8 and 9 and proceed to the receivers on line L.
  • portion C of the system can be varied widely from that shown.
  • F or example any type of Scrambler or means for mutilating the speech, that is suitable for transmission with secrecy may be used as the portion C of t-he system.
  • the extent of the frequency shifts made in the modulators A and B may be varied, as may also the frequencies which have been mentioned, all ofA which are to be considered as illustrative only and not as lim-v iting.
  • the scope of the invention is defined in the claims.
  • the methodl comprising selecting the band from different portions of the total available signal frequency range from time to time during transmission, and purposely altering the Waves in the band after its selection but. prior to their transmission to render them difficult of recept-ion.
  • the method of telephone transmission comprising fromtime to time selecting from different portions of the speech range a given range of frequencies suliiciently Wide to permit intelligible reception, and after its selection subdividing it into relatively narrow sub-bands and rearrangingthem in the frequency spectrum preparatory to their transmlssion.
  • the method of secret signaling comprising selecting from speech Waves from time to time different bands of frequencies including sufficient components to be understandable, reducing' the selected components to occupy the same frequency limits, subdividing'the band including between the said limits into relatively narrow frequency bands, rearranging the last mentioned bands with respect to one another and transmitting the rearranged bands to a distance.
  • the method of signal transmission comprising selecting from the signalinglwaves a and of frequency ⁇ components sufliciently wide to permit intelligible reception, subdividing'said band into relatively narrow portions, rearranging said portions with respect to one another preparatory to transmitting Ithe1n,deriving by modulation a band of frequency components within the same limits as the first mentioned band but taken from a different part of the essential signal frequency range, ysubdividing the last mentioned band into sub-bands, rearranging the subbands preparatory to transmission and from time to time repeating the process while deriving the band to be subdivided from respectively diferent portions of the signaling frequency range.
  • a frequency transposing system comprising a source of frequencies, modulators and demodulators for shifting said frequencies without changing their relative positions With respect to one another', and modulators and demodulators for dividing said frequencies into relatively narrow bands and shifting and inverting said bands with respect to one another for distance transmission, the positions of said original frequencies in said t bands being controlled by both sets of said modulators and demodulators.
  • a system for signal transmission comprising means for variably modulating the signaling waves, means for selecting from the modulated waves different bands of signaling components from time to time, said bands having the same frequency limits and respectively representing intelligible portions of the' signal which differ from each other as to the frequency ranges that they occupy respectively in the original signal, and means for dividing each of said bands into relatively narrow sub-bands and rearranging said subbands preparatory to transmission.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Transmitters (AREA)
  • Reduction Or Emphasis Of Bandwidth Of Signals (AREA)

Description

June 10, 1930. R. A. Hx-:lslNG SECRET COMMUNICATING SYSTEM Filed Oct. 8, 1928 QQ QQQQ v Patented June 10, 1930 UNITED STATES PATENT 'o1-FICE RAYMOND A. HEISING, OF MILLBURN, NEW JERSEY, ASSIGNOR TO BELL TELEPHONE LABORATORIES, INCORPORATED, F NEW YORK, N. Y., A CORPORATION OF NEW YORK v SECRET-COMMUNICATING SYSTEM Application filed October 8, 1928. Serial No. 310,966.
The present invention relates to the secret transmission and reception of electrical current Waves for signaling at speech or radio frequencies. I
An object of the invention is to enable a message to be rendered unintelligible when received by the ordinary receiving apparatus, or special apparatus when the receiving operator is unfamiliar with the secret method of l0 transmission in detail.
The principles of this invention are similar to those of the secrecy systems disclosed in Fletcher Patent No. 1,573,924, February 23, 1926, and R. W. Chesnut Patent No. 1,725,-
566, issued Aug. 20, 1929, on application Serial No. 240,116, filedDecember 15, 1927 in which the frequency band of the message currents or waves is divided into sub-bands'of narrower frequency ranges.` In these systems, particularly the latter, secrecy, is obtained by shifting the positions of the subbands with respect to one another or by in- Verting the frequencies of any sub-band within its particular range offrequencies or by quencies within any other sub-band range to which it may be shifted. In this manner combinations of positions and inversions may be made while the transmitted band retains the same overall frequency limits as the original message band. This is desirable from the transmission standpoint since it allows the use of ordinary broadcast and carrier modulation equipment. q
In the present invention a higher degree of secrecy is obtainable than in the above systems by varying at times the extreme frequency limits in' the frequency scale of the sub-bands while maintaining a constant width message band for impressing on the transmitting equipment. Either a band of constant width may .be selected from the range of message frequency currents or the entire band may be impressed on the system, the reduction to any constant desirable range being made somewhere within the system.
Specifically this invention provides for shifting the entire band of waves that are destined to be treated in the manner referred to above or disclosed in the F letcher'or Chesshifting the sub-bands and inverting the fre- 3 secrecy. On the basis of the frequencles above given, the original band will be shifted 100v cycles up or down respectively in the fre.
quency scale. The time intervals for shifting may be made any desired length and synchronized with the changes in combinations of the sub-bands. This is especially advantageous because it prevents anyone who may have been able to set his beating oscillators lto one particular sub-band which is transmitting suflicient energy at the proper frequencies to make it intelligible, to know where to set them to continue picking up this one band.
A better understanding of the invention will be had from thedetailed description to follow, in connection with the attached drawings in which the single figure is a partially blocked schematic of one embodiment of the invention.
The system has been divided 'into three portions for the purpose of description, such as a modulator A, a demodulator B and subdividing circuits C. This latter portion C of the system is identical with thatvshown in F ig.- 1 of R. W. Chesnut patent referred to above and will be described only briefly in this application.
Modulator circuit A, of the well known balanced type, is supplied from an oscillator 5 with any desired modulating frequency through transformers 6 and 7. The signalformer 14 and is impressed on the grids of the tubes of the modulator' B. The modulator B is supplied through transformers 15 with various modulating frequencies from oscillator 17 the output frequency of which is controlled by keys 18, 19 and 20. These keys cause the actuation of relays 22, 23 and 24, respectively, through a battery 25 which permit the addition or subtraction of condensers 26, 27 and 28, respectively, to and from the tuned control circuit of the oscillator 17.
The output from the modulator B is impressed through transformer 30 on the subdivided circuits of the system shown in portion C. As disclosed in the R. W. Chesnut application, the signaling frequencies pass through the low pass filters F1 having a 3000 cycle cut-o, and into four channels A, B C
' and D having modulators M, MD, MC and D which are supplied with carrier frequencies from oscillators OA, OB, OC and OD of 7 600,
7050, 6500 and 5950 cycles per second respectively. The resistances R are employed to match the impedances of the channels with the impedance of the input transformer 30.
After modulation the signaling band passes through band lters Fe with the common range of 8000 to 8550 cycles per second. The bands are thus reduced to a common frequency level but, of course, taken from different parts of the signaling band. These bands are then interchanged in the frequen'cy spectrum in any desirable combination by the switching apparatus at S which is identical with that shown in Patent No. 1,725,032, issued Aug. 20, 1929, on C. L. Weiss, Jr., application, Serial No. 203,703, filed July 6, 1927. Working in conjunction with the switching apparatus are the demodulators DA, DD, C and DD supplied from oscillators OA', OD, OC and OD' with frequencies of 7600 Y or 8950 cycles per second from oscillator OA' frequencies of 7050 or 9500 cyles per second from oscillator OD', 6500 or 10,050 cycles per second from oscillator OC' and 5950 or.10,600 cycles per second from oscillator OB'. The bands nextpass through filter F2 having the same cut-oft as filter F1 into band filters F A, 15B, FC and FD passing bands of frequencies from 4:00 to 950 cycles per second, 950 to 1500 cycles per second, 1500 to 2050 cycles per second and 2050 to 2600 cycles per second, respectively. Compensatingfilter CF of the type disclosed in Mills Patent 1,616,193 of February 1, 1927 aids the transmission through filters FA, FD, FC and FD at the cutoff points. A band of frequencies from 400 to 2600 cycles per second is thus put on the line for distance transmission.
F olloyving the operation of the system, if We consider frequencies between 100 and 5000 cycles per second as practically all of those of importance which lie Within the signaling band, and the frequency of oscillator 5 as 6000 cycles per second, there Will occur two side bands of frequencies from 6100 to 11,000 cycles per second and frequencies from 5900 to 1000 cycles' per second. The filter 13 is constructed to pass onlv the upper side band of frequencies from 6100 to 11,000 cycles per second which is impressed on the demodulator B. Assuming that the closing of key 18 supplies the demodulator With a frequency of 5900 cycles per second from oscillator 17, then the two resulting side bands are of frequencies from 200 to 5100 cycles per second and 12,000 to 16,900 cycles per second, the latter side band being out of the range of the filters F1. However, the 200 to 5100 cycle per second side band is the original 100 to 5,000 cycle per second signaling band, except that it has been shifted 100 cycles. Considering an intermediate frequency of 1000 'cycles per second in the original band this frequency now lies at a 1100 cycles per second frequency level.
Assuming that the closing of key 19 produces a demodulating frequency of 6000 cycles per second, the band impressed on the lters F1 will be 100 to 5000 cycles per second or the original range. If the key 20 produces a demodulating frequency of 6100 cycles per second, then a resulting side band will be from 0 to 4900 cycles per second and a frequency which Was originally 1000 cycles per second now lies at a frequency level of 900 cycles per second. As the keys 18, 19 and 20 are thus manipulated, the original signaling band Will be shifted 100 cycles per second in either direction before impression on the filter F1 or impressed on these filters at their original level.
The filters F1 pass the signaling band of frequencies from zero to 3000, which are modulated and reduced to four bands havin cycles per second as described in the R. W. Chesnut patent referred to above. If the original 1000 cycles per second frequency is modulated in MD, it will be shifted to 8050 cycles per second,y and will, if demodulated in DD by a frequency of 6500 cycles per second, be' shifted to 1550 cycles per second and transmitted at this frequency. When key 18 is closed therefore the 1000 cycles per second frequency will be transmitted vat 1650 cycles and when key 20 is closed it is transmitted at 1450 cycles assuming the same conditions 1n the switching circuits S.. A similar operation, of course, occurs for all the frequencles transmitted so that no frequencies or band of frequencies remains natural or in any o ne position suiiciently long to permit of its 1ntelligible reception.
Frequency shifts of 200 or 300 cycles per second may also be made in the modulator in any desired order and rapidity. Thls shifting of the entire band, together with the shifting and inversion of the sub-bands of the system in portion C provides a secrecy g the common frequency range of 8000 to 8500 -on transformers 8 and 9 and proceed to the receivers on line L.
It will be understood that the portion C of the system can be varied widely from that shown. F or example any type of Scrambler or means for mutilating the speech, that is suitable for transmission with secrecy may be used as the portion C of t-he system. Also the extent of the frequency shifts made in the modulators A and B may be varied, as may also the frequencies which have been mentioned, all ofA which are to be considered as illustrative only and not as lim-v iting. The scope of the invention is defined in the claims. Y
What is claimed is:
1. In secret transmission of signaling Waves comprising a band of frequencies suficiently wide to permit intelligible reception, the methodl comprising selecting the band from different portions of the total available signal frequency range from time to time during transmission, and purposely altering the Waves in the band after its selection but. prior to their transmission to render them difficult of recept-ion.
2. The method of telephone transmission comprising fromtime to time selecting from different portions of the speech range a given range of frequencies suliiciently Wide to permit intelligible reception, and after its selection subdividing it into relatively narrow sub-bands and rearrangingthem in the frequency spectrum preparatory to their transmlssion.
3. The method of secret signaling comprising selecting from speech Waves from time to time different bands of frequencies including sufficient components to be understandable, reducing' the selected components to occupy the same frequency limits, subdividing'the band including between the said limits into relatively narrow frequency bands, rearranging the last mentioned bands with respect to one another and transmitting the rearranged bands to a distance.
4;. The method of signal transmission comprising selecting from the signalinglwaves a and of frequency` components sufliciently wide to permit intelligible reception, subdividing'said band into relatively narrow portions, rearranging said portions with respect to one another preparatory to transmitting Ithe1n,deriving by modulation a band of frequency components within the same limits as the first mentioned band but taken from a different part of the essential signal frequency range, ysubdividing the last mentioned band into sub-bands, rearranging the subbands preparatory to transmission and from time to time repeating the process while deriving the band to be subdivided from respectively diferent portions of the signaling frequency range.
5. A frequency transposing system comprising a source of frequencies, modulators and demodulators for shifting said frequencies without changing their relative positions With respect to one another', and modulators and demodulators for dividing said frequencies into relatively narrow bands and shifting and inverting said bands with respect to one another for distance transmission, the positions of said original frequencies in said t bands being controlled by both sets of said modulators and demodulators.
6. A system for signal transmission comprising means for variably modulating the signaling waves, means for selecting from the modulated waves different bands of signaling components from time to time, said bands having the same frequency limits and respectively representing intelligible portions of the' signal which differ from each other as to the frequency ranges that they occupy respectively in the original signal, and means for dividing each of said bands into relatively narrow sub-bands and rearranging said subbands preparatory to transmission.
In witness whereof, I hereunto subscribeY my name this 6th day of October, 1928.
RAYMOND A. HEISING.
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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2530824A (en) * 1946-08-20 1950-11-21 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Secret carrier signaling method and system
US2586475A (en) * 1946-02-04 1952-02-19 Patelhold Patentverwertung Secrecy system wherein frequency bands of messages are intermixed during multiplexing
US2590746A (en) * 1948-09-10 1952-03-25 Lee E Adler Control system for carrier telecommunication circuits
US3201517A (en) * 1944-04-12 1965-08-17 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Privacy communication system
US3777064A (en) * 1972-06-01 1973-12-04 Us Navy Voice privacy system

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3201517A (en) * 1944-04-12 1965-08-17 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Privacy communication system
US2586475A (en) * 1946-02-04 1952-02-19 Patelhold Patentverwertung Secrecy system wherein frequency bands of messages are intermixed during multiplexing
US2530824A (en) * 1946-08-20 1950-11-21 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Secret carrier signaling method and system
US2590746A (en) * 1948-09-10 1952-03-25 Lee E Adler Control system for carrier telecommunication circuits
US3777064A (en) * 1972-06-01 1973-12-04 Us Navy Voice privacy system

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