US2026613A - Secrecy system - Google Patents

Secrecy system Download PDF

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Publication number
US2026613A
US2026613A US683124A US68312433A US2026613A US 2026613 A US2026613 A US 2026613A US 683124 A US683124 A US 683124A US 68312433 A US68312433 A US 68312433A US 2026613 A US2026613 A US 2026613A
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spectrum
bands
cycles
frequency
cps
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US683124A
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Chireix Henri
Villem Raymond
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Thales SA
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CSF Compagnie Generale de Telegraphie sans Fil SA
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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

  • inter ference of this sort results in diaphony (crosstalk) between the different channels.
  • the voice spectrum is cut up into several parts which may be inversed or transposed at the sending end so as to result in a jammed or garbed spectrum.
  • the garbled spectrum is fed to the modulation circuit of the transmitter and after having passed through the'usual radio frequency and medium frequency circuits it is integrally fed to a detector whereafter selector means and transposing means are rendered operative so as to restore the initial spectrum.
  • the present invention has as its object ways and means adapted to secure multiplex transmission and secret telephony transmission without causingat the receiving end distortions introduced by propagation and without requiring 2 any appreciable enlargement of the transmitted radio frequency spectrum.
  • the essential feature 0 the system consists in operating and effecting selection at the receiving station prior to detection and in causing the sep- 5 arately treated carrier wave to act upon the totality of the side bands, or separately upon each partof these latter, or even upon an assembly of these parts conveniently grouped together.
  • Figure 1 illustrates a transmitter and Figures 2 to 4 various embodiments 40 according to the principles of the present invention.
  • Fig. 5 illustrates in detail the carrier wave suppressor of Fig. 4.
  • the transmitter time by 2 f1 and An arrangement for such a transmitter is illustrated in Figure 1 wherein (1) Microphone (2) Band pass filter for 300 to 1200 cycles (3) Band pass filter for 1200 to 2400 cycles (4) Modulator or heterodyne of 1400 cycles (5) Modulator or heterodyne of 2700 cycles (6) Band pass filter for 1700 to 2600 cycles (7) Band pass filter for 300 to 1500 cycles (8) Modulator for transmission (9) Carrier wave generator including high frequency amplification.
  • the aggregate spectrum that has been picked up is passed through the selection and amplifying means of the kind customarily employed, but the receiver terminates in frequency changer means wherein selection according to the method hereinafter to be indicated is eflected. This is indicated in Figure 2.
  • modulators of frequencies 1400 and 2700 cps., respectively, By causing modulators of frequencies 1400 and 2700 cps., respectively, to act upon z'ri and 2'12.
  • the wave C indicated by way of example to be equal to 10,000 cps., may be fur- $7 nished with an amplitude regulator system independent of the amplitude regulator which may be provided for the aggregate spectrum passed through the first stages of the receiver equipment.
  • Receiver including high frequency amplification and anti-fading control (11)
  • Local generator including amplitude regulater (12)
  • Mixer and detector (13) Band pass filter for 7,400 to 8,300 cycles (14) Band pass filter for 8,500 to 9,700 cycles (15) Band pass filter for 10,000 cycles (16) Band pass filter for 10,300 to 11,500 cycles 40 (17) Band pass filter for 11,700 to 12,600 cycles (18) Detectors (19) Band pass filter for 1700 to 2600 cycles.
  • the filtering means are simplified, and in lieu of four detectors two need to be provided only, and to one of these are fed bands A and C, and to the other one bands B and C.
  • the restitution of the carrier wave at the receiving ,end may be efiected in synchronism with the sending wave, and in case there is a pilot wave the same could be used for the purpose of regulating the inter mediate frequency C.
  • cross-modulation or intermodulation between the side bands may be pre cluded by causing to act together under symmetric conditions upon abalanced detector ( Figure the side bands hereinbefore designated by A, B, C, D and E and in parallel the wave C treated and filtered separately.
  • Method of secret radio communication consisting of dividing the modulator spectrum into I several channels, filtering a determined band in each of these channels, separately transposing',
  • a system for secret radio communication having, in combination, a transmitter comprising a source of modulator spectrum, filters for dividing the spectrum into several channels and to obtain a predetermined band in eachof these channels, frequency changers for separately transposing the filtered bands, filtering means eliminating the undesirable parts of the transposed bands, means for combining the transposed and filtered bands, a modulator operated by the entire combination of bands and a source radiating the high frequency modulated by this modulator, and a receiver comprising a wave collector, means for amplifying the received energy, a local generator, means for superposing the energy of the generator with the received energy I, so as to change the carrier frequency, means for separately selecting the changed carrier wave and difierent parts of the modulator spectrum, means for superposing the carrier wave 80 HENRI CHIREIX. RAYMOND VILLEM. 40

Description

Jan.
H. CHIREIX ET'AL SECRECY SYSTEM Filed Aug. 1, 1933 ZSheets-Sheet l HETERODYNES MODULA OR 8. F: GENERATOR AND AMPLIFIER J MIXE AND
mmER,N
a O DETECTOR DETE T R FILTER FILTE DETECTOR swam M i 4.5. 0.5,
L0 CA1- GENERATO DEMODULATOR INVENTOR RAYMOND VILLEN HENRI ATTORNEY ?atented Jan. 7, 1936 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE SECBECY SYSTEM of France Application August 1, 1933, Serial No. 683,124
In France August 12, 1932 2 Claims.
When a plurality of transmissions are sent off from one and the same transmitter apparatus simultaneously, or only one transmission characterized by modulation by a frequency spectrum,
5 it is advantageous, particularly in short wave communication to preclude interference between the various modulation frequencies which may occur as a result of certain phenomena occurring in propagation.
In the case of multiplex transmission, inter ference of this sort results in diaphony (crosstalk) between the different channels.
In the case of telephonic transmission, stray frequencies are produced and these result in distortion causing an impairment in intelligibility.
1n the case of uncoded telephonic communication these stray frequencies are harmonics of those of the initial spectrum and their amplitude is liable to reach considerable proportions. In
the case of secret telephony transmission systems the situation is no longer the same. In these transmissions, the voice spectrum is cut up into several parts which may be inversed or transposed at the sending end so as to result in a jammed or garbed spectrum.
The different channels produced by such decomposition of the voice are thus similar'to those in multiplex transmissions.
The garbled spectrum is fed to the modulation circuit of the transmitter and after having passed through the'usual radio frequency and medium frequency circuits it is integrally fed to a detector whereafter selector means and transposing means are rendered operative so as to restore the initial spectrum. I
Experience has shown that the sending systems mentioned above, particularly short wave systems, are inapplicable and unserviceable in the case of communication over long distances.
40 In fact, the conditions of propagation of short waves are such that inside the transmitted spectrum certain frequencies will be especially weakened; it frequently happens that the carrier wave is weakened, while the side bands preserve their large amplitudes.
If it is kept in mind that the spectrum of correct reproduction is obtained by interference between side bands and carrier wave and that, on the contrary, those factors causative of distortion are the result of interference between the side bands,
it will readily be seen that in the case of impairment of the carrier wave the stray factors (distortion for telephony and diaphony (cross-talk) in telegraphic work) appear especially with a very large amplitude in reference to the signal of 001':-
rect of reconstitution. In other words, the beats between the side band frequencies become abnormally large relative to the desired signal which is produced as a result of beats between the carrier and the various side band frequencies. 5
Moreover, if parts of the voice or speech spectrum have experienced inversions or transpositions, unless these latter are considerable and result as a consequence in the transmission of a radio frequency spectrum of a length incoml0 patible with that of channels admissible in practice, it is found that the distortions introduced by Hertzian propagation are such that, at the receiving end, they will hardly ever allow of satisfactory clearness after re-constitution. 15
Now, the present invention has as its object ways and means adapted to secure multiplex transmission and secret telephony transmission without causingat the receiving end distortions introduced by propagation and without requiring 2 any appreciable enlargement of the transmitted radio frequency spectrum.
The essential feature 0 the system consists in operating and effecting selection at the receiving station prior to detection and in causing the sep- 5 arately treated carrier wave to act upon the totality of the side bands, or separately upon each partof these latter, or even upon an assembly of these parts conveniently grouped together.
For a better understanding of the system there 30 shall be given a concrete example of secret telephony which, as shall be shown, may be regarded as a multiplex transmission. In this example the voice spectrum shallbe considered as having been divided into two parts, though it will be as quite evident that the invention applies equally to the case where the voice spectrum is divided into a greater number of subdivisions.
In the drawings Figure 1 illustrates a transmitter and Figures 2 to 4 various embodiments 40 according to the principles of the present invention. Fig. 5 illustrates in detail the carrier wave suppressor of Fig. 4.
Let us consider, for instance, a voice spectrum having a frequency range extending from 45 2f= 300-2400 cps. (cycles per; second) and let us assume this range to be divided by the aid of filters into two spectra and f2=1200 to 2400 cps. (the'symbol 2 does not by any means indicate here any arithmetic operation, but it serves simply to designate a,band inside which the frequencies under consideration are confined) Let us suppose, also for the sake of argument an transposed from 1400 cps., and
and the upper band for 2, the spectra become 2 f1= 1 700-2600 cpm, and
2f2= 1500-300 cps.
The transmitter time by 2 f1 and An arrangement for such a transmitter is illustrated in Figure 1 wherein (1) Microphone (2) Band pass filter for 300 to 1200 cycles (3) Band pass filter for 1200 to 2400 cycles (4) Modulator or heterodyne of 1400 cycles (5) Modulator or heterodyne of 2700 cycles (6) Band pass filter for 1700 to 2600 cycles (7) Band pass filter for 300 to 1500 cycles (8) Modulator for transmission (9) Carrier wave generator including high frequency amplification. I
At the receiving end, the aggregate spectrum that has been picked up is passed through the selection and amplifying means of the kind customarily employed, but the receiver terminates in frequency changer means wherein selection according to the method hereinafter to be indicated is eflected. This is indicated in Figure 2.
This reception, in general, is facilitated by insuring a frequency change at relatively low frequency, say, 10,000 cps. As a result of such frequency conversion the incoming spectrum becomes 10,000 cps. a; 2'12, 10,000 cps.:l:2 1, in other words:
A Y 8 7.400 to 8.300 c. p. -s.s00 to'9.700 T.
6 n 10.00 p. ll-10.300 to 11.500 p. 2
11.700 to 12.600 p. p. a.
being fed with the bands A, B, D, or E and the,
component C.
It will be seen that as a result 01' these detectors there are obtained AzC, Bic, DiC, EztC and is modulated at the same after filtering of the upper undesirable bands there are finally obtained:
A'C=En BC=z'n DC=Z' 3 2600 to 1700 pps.-45,000 to 300 pps.-300 to 1500 pps.
' EC=E;1 1700 to 2600 pps.
By causing modulators of frequencies 1400 and 2700 cps., respectively, to act upon z'ri and 2'12.
there are obtained, after suitable filtering of the new modulation bands thus obtained, following spectra:
cps.
Ef1=300 to 1.200 p. p. s.
zf2=1.200 to 2.400 p. p. s.
which are fed to the grid of a mixing non-detecting tube or to a common circuit so as to obtain the initial a. i'. band According to one of the feasible modifications of the invention the wave C, indicated by way of example to be equal to 10,000 cps., may be fur- $7 nished with an amplitude regulator system independent of the amplitude regulator which may be provided for the aggregate spectrum passed through the first stages of the receiver equipment.
Referring more particularly to Figure 2 which shows this arrangement:
(10) Receiver including high frequency amplification and anti-fading control (11) Local generator including amplitude regulater (12) Mixer and detector (13) Band pass filter for 7,400 to 8,300 cycles (14) Band pass filter for 8,500 to 9,700 cycles (15) Band pass filter for 10,000 cycles (16) Band pass filter for 10,300 to 11,500 cycles 40 (17) Band pass filter for 11,700 to 12,600 cycles (18) Detectors (19) Band pass filter for 1700 to 2600 cycles.
(20) Band pass filter for 300 to 1500 cycles.
(21) Demodulator at' 1400 cycles.
(22) Demodulator at 2700 cycles.
(23) Mixer, non-detector.
(24) Telephone.
According to another modified scheme indicated in Figure 3, the components A, B, C, D, E,
and
allowing of the transmission of A, C, and E, in the case of the st, and of B, C, D, in the second one.
Next there are mounted two detectors which are worked upon by the respective two filters mentioned. Above the said detectors there are obtained f1 and f2 which are thereupon fed into a Joint circuit.
In Figure 3 (25) Filter for 3 bands for 10,000, 7,400 to 8,300 and 11,700 to 12,600 cycles.
(26) Filter for 3 bands for 10,000, 8,500 to 9,700 and 10,300 to 11,500 cycles.
It will be obvious that the system is similarly applicable quite readily to transmission systems generally known as "single-hem" systems (with one side band). In such an instance, as a result of frequency conversion at 10,000-cps. there are obtained only C, D, E, or A, B, C.
The filtering means are simplified, and in lieu of four detectors two need to be provided only, and to one of these are fed bands A and C, and to the other one bands B and C.
sired amplitude at all, this circuit arrangement being obtained by omitting in Figure 2 the elements numbered I6, l1, l8, l9 and 20, shown schematically in the dotted line rectangle.
In all of these arrangements the restitution of the carrier wave at the receiving ,end may be efiected in synchronism with the sending wave, and in case there is a pilot wave the same could be used for the purpose of regulating the inter mediate frequency C.
According to a modification of the invention indicated in Figure 4, cross-modulation or intermodulation between the side bands may be pre cluded by causing to act together under symmetric conditions upon abalanced detector (Figure the side bands hereinbefore designated by A, B, C, D and E and in parallel the wave C treated and filtered separately.
After this detector, and after being fed into a filter F, there results at the output terminals the assembly of the spectra A-C, B-C, DC, E-C which for the purpose of re-constitution are handled as hereinbefore suggested.
In Figure 4 v (27) Filter for 4 bands for 7,400 to 8,300, 8,500 to 9,700, 10,300 to 11,500 cycles.
(28) Rectangle containing the scheme of Figure 5.
We claim:
1. Method of secret radio communication consisting of dividing the modulator spectrum into I several channels, filtering a determined band in each of these channels, separately transposing',
the filtered bands, separating new bands determined after transposition, combining these latter bands, modulating the transmission by'the combined spectrum, changing the frequency of the received modulated transmission, selecting different bands of the modulating frequency and carrier wave in the spectrum resulting from the changing, applying the carrier wave to the other selected bands, detecting the obtained bands, 5-
eliminating undesirable parts of these bands after detection, changing the frequency in order to reconstitute the parts of the original spectrum and'recombining these parts in order to obtain the entire spectrum.
2. A system for secret radio communication having, in combination, a transmitter comprising a source of modulator spectrum, filters for dividing the spectrum into several channels and to obtain a predetermined band in eachof these channels, frequency changers for separately transposing the filtered bands, filtering means eliminating the undesirable parts of the transposed bands, means for combining the transposed and filtered bands, a modulator operated by the entire combination of bands and a source radiating the high frequency modulated by this modulator, and a receiver comprising a wave collector, means for amplifying the received energy, a local generator, means for superposing the energy of the generator with the received energy I, so as to change the carrier frequency, means for separately selecting the changed carrier wave and difierent parts of the modulator spectrum, means for superposing the carrier wave 80 HENRI CHIREIX. RAYMOND VILLEM. 40
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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2479338A (en) * 1945-01-13 1949-08-16 Leonide E Gabrilovitch Inverter and distorter for secret communications
US2530926A (en) * 1944-04-22 1950-11-21 Radio Electr Soc Fr Short-wave, long distance communication system
US2575109A (en) * 1945-10-26 1951-11-13 Douglas E Howes Selective amplifier
US4947453A (en) * 1985-08-02 1990-08-07 National Research Development Corporation Transparent tone-in band transmitters, receivers and systems
USRE34036E (en) * 1984-06-06 1992-08-18 National Research Development Corporation Data transmission using a transparent tone-in band system

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2530926A (en) * 1944-04-22 1950-11-21 Radio Electr Soc Fr Short-wave, long distance communication system
US2479338A (en) * 1945-01-13 1949-08-16 Leonide E Gabrilovitch Inverter and distorter for secret communications
US2575109A (en) * 1945-10-26 1951-11-13 Douglas E Howes Selective amplifier
USRE34036E (en) * 1984-06-06 1992-08-18 National Research Development Corporation Data transmission using a transparent tone-in band system
US4947453A (en) * 1985-08-02 1990-08-07 National Research Development Corporation Transparent tone-in band transmitters, receivers and systems

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