US3867620A - Signal correlator with improved dynamic range - Google Patents

Signal correlator with improved dynamic range Download PDF

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US3867620A
US3867620A US327145A US32714573A US3867620A US 3867620 A US3867620 A US 3867620A US 327145 A US327145 A US 327145A US 32714573 A US32714573 A US 32714573A US 3867620 A US3867620 A US 3867620A
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signal
square wave
predetermined
multiplier
output signal
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Thomas Coor
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Princeton Applied Research Corp
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Priority to JP49010888A priority patent/JPS49118343A/ja
Priority to FR7402579A priority patent/FR2215656A1/fr
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06GANALOGUE COMPUTERS
    • G06G7/00Devices in which the computing operation is performed by varying electric or magnetic quantities
    • G06G7/12Arrangements for performing computing operations, e.g. operational amplifiers
    • G06G7/16Arrangements for performing computing operations, e.g. operational amplifiers for multiplication or division
    • G06G7/161Arrangements for performing computing operations, e.g. operational amplifiers for multiplication or division with pulse modulation, e.g. modulation of amplitude, width, frequency, phase or form
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06GANALOGUE COMPUTERS
    • G06G7/00Devices in which the computing operation is performed by varying electric or magnetic quantities
    • G06G7/12Arrangements for performing computing operations, e.g. operational amplifiers
    • G06G7/19Arrangements for performing computing operations, e.g. operational amplifiers for forming integrals of products, e.g. Fourier integrals, Laplace integrals, correlation integrals; for analysis or synthesis of functions using orthogonal functions
    • G06G7/1928Arrangements for performing computing operations, e.g. operational amplifiers for forming integrals of products, e.g. Fourier integrals, Laplace integrals, correlation integrals; for analysis or synthesis of functions using orthogonal functions for forming correlation integrals; for forming convolution integrals

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  • ABSTRACT Providing an indication of the product of two arbitrary signals utilizing an electronic multiplier whose output 1 signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in said multiplier, wherein prior to multiplying said signals in said multiplier, multiplying one of said signals with a predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide ,said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, multiplying said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other of said signals in said multiplier to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined product signal repetitivelypolarity reversed in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, the output signal from said multiplier comprised of said predetermined product signal and said DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude of said predetermined product signal is proportional substantially only to the actual product of said signals and
  • FIGI3 ARBITRARY SIGNAL MULTIPLIER SQUARE WAVE sIGNAL 50 AT ARBITRARY FREQUENCY :Fr I ASSUMES ONLY VALUESzH (OTI-IERwIsE ARBITRARY A SIGNAL SQUARE WAVE SIGNAL 5 AT ARBITRARYJ FREQUENCY Fr ASSUMES ONLY VALUES i'l (OTHERWISE ARBIT RARY) LOGIC Ocf'sIGNAL (Ax a) s+ O ORIF LINEAR (Axsy T- AN 3 R D.C'.AMPLIFIER AND Low-PAss FILTER 4*D.C.INDICATING MEANS D OFFSET.
  • the signal correlator of the present invention has improved dynamic rangedue to the utilization of novel signal multiplication techniques and novel square wave filtering techniques.
  • FIG. 9 illustrates a cascade of rotating capacitor square wave filters
  • FIG. 10 illustrates a manner in which a DC indication of amplitude of a filtered square wave signal can be provided
  • FIGS. 11 and 12 illustrate various utilizations of the rotating capacitor square wave filter of the present invention.
  • FIGS. 13 and 14 are signal correlators according to the present invention.
  • output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml may be fed into indicating means for providing an indication of the signal product (A X B), or the time average of the signal product, e.g. the DC amplifier and low-pass filter and DC indicating means shown in FIG. I; alternatively, the output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml may be fed into signal product (A 'X B) utilization means, e.g. a servo motor.
  • indicating means for providing an indication of the signal product (A X B), or the time average of the signal product e.g. the DC amplifier and low-pass filter and DC indicating means shown in FIG. I
  • the output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml may be fed into signal product (A 'X B) utilization means, e.g. a servo motor.
  • the DC drift and offset inherently present in the output signal of the electronicmultiplier M1 will adversely affect both the indication of the signal product (A X B) or the utilization of the signal product (A X B).
  • an electronic multiplier Ml which may be for example any one of several four-quadrant linear electronic multipliers known to the art
  • an electronic multiplier or modulator M2 which may be for example any one of several switching. type phase reversing multipliers known to the art
  • a polarity reversing signal generator 9 which may be for example any one of several square wave signal generators known to the art
  • signal product indicating or utilization means .12 which may be for example an AC servo motor or an RC high pass filter and synchronous rectifier.
  • either one of the arbitrary signals e.g., arbitrary signal B
  • the switching type phase reversing electronic multiplier M2 where it is multiplied by the predetermined polarity reversing signals S which 4 signal S, as shown in FIG. 2, is also fed into the electronic multiplier M2.
  • the effect of feeding arbitrary signal B, and polarity reversing signal S into the electronic multiplier M2 is to provide at the output of the electronic multiplier M2 arbitrarysignal B repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of the predetermined polarity reversing signal S; signal B repetitively'reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of polarity reversing signal S being represented by the symbolization B IS.
  • Signal B repetitively reversed in polarity and signal A are fed into electronic multiplier Ml where. they are electronically multiplied to provide the product of the signals in the form of a predetermined product signal 3 repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of the polarity. reversing signal S; this product signal is designated by the symbolization (A X B) S.
  • the output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml will be comprised of the product signal (A X B) l S and the DC drift and offset which will be present in the output signal of the electronic multiplier M1 due to circuit imperfections in the electronic multiplier M1; the output signal of the electronic multiplier including the product signal (A X B) 4S and DC drift and offset is shown graphically in the upper righthand portion of FIG. 2.
  • the peak-to-peak amplitude of the product signal (A X B) S will be proportional substantially only to the actual product of the signals (A X B) and will be substantially independent of the DC drift and offset present in the output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml.
  • the output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml shown in the upper-right hand portion of FIG. 2 has utility directly, for example, such signal may be used to directly drive an AC servo motor whose reference winding is driven in accordance with the polarity reversing signal S whereupon the output torque of the AC servo motor will be proportional directly to the signal product (A X B) and will be substantially independent of the DC drift and offset; alternately, the output signal of the electronic multiplier M1 may be passed through an RC high pass filter and fed into a synchronous rectifier driven in accordance with the polarity reversing signal S to provide a DC signal which will be the product (A X B) substantially without the DC offset and drift.
  • the repetitive polarity reversal of signal B as taught with regard to FIG. 2 may be done either periodically or aperiodically in accordance with the periodicity characteristic of the polarity reversing signal S.
  • the polarity reversing signal S may be, for example, a square wave signal which may be either symmetrical or non-symmetrical.
  • the product signal (A X B) 4S will be repetitively polarity reversed periodically or aperiodically in accordance with the period icity characteristic of the polarity reversing signal S,
  • polarity reversing signal S was a symmetrical square wave signal of arbitrary frequency f (arbitrary in the sense that it is not related to the frequency of either arbitrary signal A not necessarily B), and wherein the electronic multiplier M1 was a fourquadrant electronic multiplier, and wherein the electronic multiplier M2 was a phase-reversing switching type modulator or multiplier.
  • arbitrary signal B will have its polarity repetitively reversed at the frequencyf i.e.
  • the output of the electronic multiplier M2 may be represented by the symbolization B 1f which represents symbolically arbitrary signal B repetitively polarity reversed at frequency f,-. Consequently, the output signal of the four-quadrant linear electronic multiplier M1 will also be repetitively polarity reversed at the frequencyf,-, and hence, the output product signal of electronic multiplier Ml may be represented by the symbolization (A X B) 4 f,- which symbol represents the product (A X B) repetitively polarity reversed at frequency f,-.
  • the polarity reversing signal S is a square wave signal of frequency f,-
  • the signal product indicating or utilization means 12 such as for example the above-noted AC servo motor and RC high pass filter and synchronous rectifier, would be driven or operated at the frequency f,-, i.e. the frequency of the polarity reversing signal S.
  • signal multiplication may be accomplished in an electronic multiplier such as a linear multiplier'as shown in FIG. 2, that the subtraction of the second product from the first product may be performed electronically in any one of several signal subtracting circuits, or manually, and that one half of the difference of the product may be accomplished electronically in any one of several electronic vention which further embodiments are particularly useful wherein one of the arbitrary signals is a square wave signal at arbitrary frequency f, which assumes only values of +1 or -I a situation commonly found in signal multiplication situations, e.g. signal multiplication situations as are present in phase sensitive detectors, lock-in amplifiers, vector voltmeters, etc.
  • the linear multiplier Ml of FIG. 2 is replaced with a switching type phase reversing multiplier or modulator M3 (FIG. 3) and M6 (FIG. 4), such switching. type phase reversing modulators or multipliers being less expensive and having inherently greater dynamic range than linear multi pliers.
  • square Wave signal B of arbitrary frequency] and the polarity reversing sig nal S are fed into a suitable logic multiplier M4 (e.g. an exclusive-or circuit" known to the logic signal multiplication art) to provide signal B repetitively polarity reversed in accordance with the sign of the predetermined polarity reversing signal S.
  • Signal B, repetitively polarity reversed, and signal A are then fed into the switching type phase reversing multiplier or modulator M3 to provide the product A X B) in the form of the product signal (A X B) S as shown graphically in the upper righthand portion of FIG.'2.
  • the output signal of switching type phase reversing modulator M3 will include both the product signal (A X B) lS and the DC drift and offset inherent in the output signal of multiplier M3 due to circuit imperfections therein; the output signal of the switching type phase reversing modulator M3 being the same as shown graphically in the upper righthand portion of FIG. 2 for the output signal of linear multiplier M1 of FIG. 2.
  • arbitrary signal A andthe polarity reversing signal S are fed into the switching type phase reversing modulator M5 to provide signal A repetitively polarity reversed in accordance with the sign of the polarity reversing signal S.
  • Signal A, repetitively polarity reversed, and signal B, the square wave signal of arbitrary frequency f, assuming only logic values +1 or I, are fed intothe switching type phase reversing modulator M6 to provide the product (A X B) in the form of the product signal (A X B) ',S repetitively polarity reversed in'accordance with the sign of the polarity reversing signal S; similarly, with regard to the embodiments of FIGS.
  • the output signal of the switching type phase reversing modulator M6 will in- I clude the product signal (A X B) S and the DC drift and offset and the peak-to-peak amplitude of the product signal (A X B) 4 will be proportional substantially only to the actual product (A X B) and will be substantially independent of the DC drift and offset.
  • FIGS. 3 and 4 operate the same as the embodiments shown and described in FIG. 2 with regard to the multiplication of the signals A and B, and that the signal product indication or utilization with regard to the embodiments of FIGS. 3 and 4 is the same as that taught with regard to the embodiment of FIG. 2.
  • each apparatus includes a capacitor C and an electrically associated resistor R which will be treated in 5 detail below.
  • such apparatus is provided with an input and output as shown and includes resistor R connected in series with capacitor C which is connected to terminals T1 and T2 through .
  • a double pole double throw (DDT) switch which upon being operated alternately reverses the connection of the capacitor C to the terminals T1 and T2l
  • DDT double pole double throw
  • the apparatus of FIG. 5 is unexpectedly useful for filtering a square wave signal of frequency f, out of acomposite signal including the square wave signal and other signals, and it has been further discovered that such apparatus has, in fact, ideal characteristics as a matched, narrow band filter for filtering a symmetrical, zero median squarewave signal at frequencyf, out of such composite signal.
  • Capacitor C may thus be 4O visualized or understood as being commutated, reversed or switched at a frequency f, between the terminals T1 and T2 with the switching operation being considered to be instantaneous.
  • Such capacitor being referred to hereinafter as a rotating capacitor of frequency f,-,. the capacitor being carried through a full cycle of reversal or rotation in a time 1/i f,-.
  • rotating capacitor is also used to include such embodiments as the capacitor C of FIG.
  • FIG. 7 Shown in FIG. 7 is an embodiment wherein the resis- 6O tor C by being connected in parallel with the rotating tor R is electrically associated with the rotating capaci-
  • FIG. 8 there is shown novel apparatus utilizing'the rotating capacitor and which novel apparatus is particularly useful in practicing the filtering processes of the present invention.
  • an operational amplifier A which may be any one of several suitable operational amplifiers known to the art, an input resistor R1 and an amplifier feed-back network including resistor R and rotating capacitor C connected in parallel as shown in FIG. 8.
  • the operational amplifier A is connected as an inverting summing amplifier and is provided with inputs and outputs as shown.
  • suitable means for reversing or commutating rotating capacitor C at frequency f,- such as for example, a suitable solid state switch or switches referred to above.
  • each of the rotating capacitor square wave signal filters of FIGS. 5-8 for filtering a zero median value square wave signal having known transitions, i.e., a zero median value square wave signal of known phase and frequency and which known frequency will be referred to as frequency f,-, out ofa composite signal including such square wave signal and other signals, such as other AC signals, other AC signals and DC, noise,.etc., such composite signal is applied to the input of such rotating capacitor square wave signal filter and the connection of Y the rotating capacitor C is repetitively reversed to the terminals T1 and T2 in synchronism with the transitions of the square wave signal to be filtered, i.e., the rotating capacitor C has its connection to the terminals T1 and T2 reversed in phase with and at the frequency f,- of the square wave signal to be filtered out ofthe composite signal.
  • the rotating capacitor C and its electrically associated resistor R are chosen such that their RC time constant is much greater than the period of the square wave signal to be filtered, hence, substantially only the median value square wave signal will appear or be provided across theoutput of the rotating capacitor'square wave signal filters; the other signals of the composite signal, in particular DC, being rejected or attenuated and substantially not passing through said rotating capacitor square wave filter. More particularly, in the rotating capacitor square wave filters of FIGS. 5-7, the filtered square wave signal will appear across the terminals T1 and T2 to which the output of the filters is connected, and in the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10 of FIG. 8 the filtered square wave signal will appear across the output of the inverting summing amplifier. v
  • the filtered square wave signal provided at the output of the inverting summing amplifier will be amplified .by a factor equal to the resistor ratio, R/Rl.-The band-width of the rotating capacitor square wave filter of FIG. 8 is proportional to l/RC, and is best described as a synchronous matched filter for zero median value-square waves, especially, symmetrical square waves of zero median value.
  • wave signal filters of FIG. 5-8 that where the zero median value square wave signal to be filtered is a symmetrical square wave and where the other signals of said composite signal are other AC signals and/or DC signals, substantially only the symmetrical square wave signal appears or is provided at the output of the filter; that where the zero median value square wave signal is Y a non-symmetrical square wave signal and where the other signals of the composite signal are other AC signals, substantially only the non-symmetrical square wave signal appears or is provided at the output of the filter; and that where the zero median value square wave signal is a non-symmetrical square wave and the other signals are other AC signals and DC signal, substantially only said non-symmetrical square wave signal and portions of said DC signal appear or are provided at the output of the filter.
  • the measurement of small amplitud square wave signals of known frequency and phase in the presence of large amplitude noise can be accomplished advantageously by combining the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10, of FIGS. 5-8 with a synchronous rectifier or detector such as a.switching type phase reversing multiplier or demodulator MI as shown in FIG. 10, the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10 of FIG. 8 being actually shown in FIG. 9, however, it will be understood that the rotating capacitor squarewave filters 10 of FIGS. 5-7 could also be combined with the multiplier M1 of FIG. 10.
  • the multiplier M1, or synchronous rectifier or demodulator is oper ated in synchronism with the transitions of the filtered square wave signal and'the reversing of the rotating capacitor C.
  • the multiplier M1 may receive the filtered square wave signal and a square wave signal in phase with and at the frequency f,- of the filtered square wave signal, which may be provided by a suitable square wave generator 14 (which generator may also be used to operate the means for reversing or commutating the rotatingcapacitor C as shown), and the phase-reversing switching type multiplier MI will multiply or synchronously rectify or demodulate, the received squarewave signalsand provide a DC signal which will be proportional to the amplitude of the filtered square wave signal.
  • DC signal may be indicated by suitable DC indicating means such as the DC meter shown. With regard to such DC signal being proportional to the magnitude of the filtered square wave signal, if the gain of the filter. e.g.
  • the response to input noise and offfrequency (not f,-) Coherent signals can be made arbitrarily small by reducing the bandwidth (l/RC) of the rotating capacitor square wave filter, i.e. by increasing the RC time constant. Because the signals of interest at point Q in FIG. 9 are zero median square wave signals of frequency f,-, and have been bandwidth limited to an arbitrary degree by the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10, the utility of the circuit of FIG. 10 may be advantageously enhanced by the addition of AC'amplification means, such as a suitable AC amplifier A1, andlor-suitable high pass filtering means C2-R2 such as shown in FIG.
  • AC'amplification means such as a suitable AC amplifier A1, andlor-suitable high pass filtering means C2-R2 such as shown in FIG.
  • the high pass filter, C2-R2 further removes any DC and low frequency signals included in the filtered composite signal prior to synchronous rectification by the multiplier M1, and prevents DC drifts and offsets from the operational amplifier A and AC amplifier A1 from being converted into square waves at the frequencyf by the multiplier, modulator, or synchronous rectifier, Ml.
  • the apparatus or circuit of FIG. 11 is particularly useful for band limiting, detecting and measuring the amplitude of a small square wave signal in the presence of large noise. Further, because of the noiserejecting properties of the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10, the dynamic range requirements on the additional amplification means, e.g. AC amplifier A1, are greatly reduced.
  • a further application of the rotating capacitor filter 10 is in a carrier-type DC and low frequency amplifier as shown in FIG. 12.
  • the circuit of FIG. 12 is the same as that shown in FIG. 11 except that a phase reversing switching type modulator, or multiplier, M2 has been added prior to the input of the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10.
  • the apparatus or circuit of FIG. 12 has been found to be particularly useful in amplifying only the, or substantially only the, DC and low frequency signals found in a composite signal including such DC and low fre quency signals and high frequency signals.
  • a composite signal is applied to theinput of the circuit whereupon the composite signal is modulated by modulator M2 by being repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of a square wave signal of frequency f,- wherein the frequency f,- is less than the period of the low frequency signals.
  • the composite signal is then fed into the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10 and the balance of the circuit operates and functions as taught above with regard to the application circuit shown in FIG. 11.
  • the RC time constant is made much greater than the period ofthe square wave signalf; and is made less than the period of the low frequency signals to be amplified.
  • the frequency response of the circuit of FIG. 12 is flat from DC out to a frequency f 1/21rRC where it will begin to fall off at approximately 6 db. per octave. There are no spurious responses for input frequencies at or near frequency f,-, nor for any frequency whatsoever.
  • the signal correlator of improved dynamic range is provided by the unique combinations of the signal multiplication processes and apparatus taught above with regard to FIGS. 1-4, and the square wave filtering processes and apparatus taught above with regard to FIGS. 5-12, as illustrated by way of specific example in FIG. 13.
  • the signal multiplication section 14, depending upon whether the signals A and B are both arbitrary. or whether one of the signals assumes only the value +1 or l otherwise arbitrary, may be any one of the signal multiplication circuits of FIGS. 2-4, with the embodiment of FIG. 2 being shown specifically .in FIG. 13'. such circuits operating as taught above.
  • the square wave filtering section may be any one of the embodiments l0,of FIGS. 5-9, with such circuits operating as taught above.
  • the balance of the signal correlator shown in FIG. 13 may be the same as the balance of the circuit of FIG. 11 after the initial square wave filter portion, and will operate in the same manner to provide. the DC signal indication or output.
  • the output of the signal correlator of FIG. 13 will be a DC voltage proportional to the exponentially weighted time average of the product of the arbitrary inputsignals A and B, with the averaging time T equal to the time constant RC of the rotating capacitor C and its electrically associated resistor R.
  • FIG. 14 A hybrid analogue-digital circuit for accomplishing the square wave filtering and synchronous detection means is shown in FIG. 14. It is similar to that described in the literature by Morris and Johnston, E. D. Morris and Harold S. Johnston, Digital Phase Sensitive Detector, RSI 39, p. 620 I968).
  • the novel signal multiplication technique is combined with a voltage to frequency converter and an up/down counter, operated at frequency f,-,.to accomplish the detection of the square wave from the multiplier M1.
  • the signal correlation process with improved dynamic range for providing anindication of the time average of the product of two arbitrary signals, which signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in said multiplier comprising the steps of:
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C' and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a voltage signal and is applied across the series connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in parallel with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronicmultiplier is a current signal and is applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C and resistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said AC output signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier.
  • predetermined square wave signal and said predetermined-square wave product signal. are symmetricalsquare wave signals.
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a voltage signal and is applied across the series connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in parallel with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a current signal and is applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R 'and saidcapacitor C.
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C andresistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein substantially only said predetermined square wave product signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier.
  • Signal correlator apparatus with improved dynamic range for providing an indication of the time average-of the product of two arbitrary signals, which apparatus utilizes an electronic multiplier whose output signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in said multiplier, comprising:
  • additional multiplier means for. multiplying one of said signals with a predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, said electronic multiplier for multiplying said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other of said signals to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined product signal repetitively polarity reversed in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, the output signal from said electronic multiplier comprised of said predetermined product signal and said-DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude of said predetermined product signal is proportional substantially only to 'the actual product of said signals and is substantially independent of said- DC drift and offset; synchronous filter means for filtering said output signal of said electronic multiplier in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to is said indication of the time average of the product of said two arbitrary signals.
  • said additional multiplier means further includes means for generating a square wave signal which square wave' signal is said predetermined polarity reversing signal.
  • Apparatus according to claim 35 wherein said means for generating said square wave signal are means for generating a symmetrical square wave signal.
  • a rotating capacitor square wave filter including a rotating capacitor C, connected between terminals T1 and T2, and an electrically associated resistor.
  • said synchronous rectifying means includes a signal generator for providing a predetermined square wave signal in phase with and atthe same frequency of said predetermined product signal and a switching type phase revcrsing multiplier for receiving said AC output signal and said predetermined square wave signal and for multiplying said signals and for providing said DC signal.
  • Apparatus according to claim 29 further including amplifying means connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying said AC output signal.
  • Apparatus according to claim 29 further including a high pass filter connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectify- 1 ing means and for further filtering said AC output sig- R.
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter having an input for receiving said output signal of said electronic multiplier;
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a voltage signal and is applied across the series connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in parallel with said capacitor C and wherein said output-signal of said electronic multiplier is a current signal andis applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C and resistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein substantially only said predetermined product signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier.
  • Apparatus according to claim 29 further including amplifying means and a high pass filter connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying and further filtering said AC output signal to further remove any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal.
  • Signal correlator apparatus with improved dynamic range for providing an indication proportional to the exponentially weighted time average ofcharacteristic time T of the product of two arbitrary signals A and B, i.e. A X B which apparatus utilizes an electronic multiplier whose output signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in the electronic multiplier, comprising:
  • said electronic multiplier for multiplying signal B repetitively reversed in polarity times arbitrary signal A to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined square wave product signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined square wave signal in phase therewith and at the frequency thereof f,-, the output signal of said electronic multiplier comprised of said predetermined square-wave product signal and said DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude 'of said predetermined square wave product signal is proportional only to the actual product of said signals A and B and is substantially independent of said DC drift and offset; a synchronous filter means for filtering said output signal of said electronic multiplier in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to attenuate said DC drift and offset, thereby to provide an AC output signal, said synchronous filter means including: i.
  • a rotating capacitor square wave filter including a capacitor C and an electrically associated resistor R, said capacitor C being connected between terminals T1 and T2, and ii. means for repetitively reversing the connection of said capacitor C to said terminals T1 and T2 in phase with and at the frequency f,-'of said predetermined square wave signal whereby, upon the RC time constant of said resistor Rand capacitor C being much greater than the period of said predetermined square wave product signal, said AC output signal comprising substantially only said predetermined square wave product signal is provided at the output of said rotating capacitor square wave filter; and
  • Apparatus according to claim 47 wherein said electronic multiplier is a switching type phase reversing modulator.
  • Apparatus according to claim 47 wherein said electronic multiplier is a logic multiplier.
  • Apparatus according to claim 51 wherein said square wave generator is for generating a symmetrical square wave signal.
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C and 18 wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a current signal and is applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
  • said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C and resistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the' input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein substantially only said predetermined square wave product signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier.
  • said synchronous rectifying means include a square wave signal generator for providing a second predetermined square wave signal in phase with and at the same frequency f,- of said predetermined square wave product signal and a switching type phase reversing multiplier for receiving said AC output signal and said second predetermined square wave signal and for multiplying said signals and for providing said DC signal.
  • Apparatus according to claim 45 further including amplifying means connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying said AC output signal.
  • Apparatus according'to claim further including a high pass filter connected intermediate said syn- A chronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for further filtering said AC output signal by further removing any DC and low frequency sig nals included in said AC output signal.
  • Apparatus according to claim 45 further including amplifying means and a high pass filter connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and-said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying and further filtering said AC output signal to further remove any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal.

Abstract

Providing an indication of the product of two arbitrary signals utilizing an electronic multiplier whose output signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in said multiplier, wherein prior to multiplying said signals in said multiplier, multiplying one of said signals with a predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, multiplying said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other of said signals in said multiplier to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined product signal repetitively polarity reversed in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, the output signal from said multiplier comprised of said predetermined product signal and said DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude of said predetermined product signal is proportional substantially only to the actual product of said signals and is substantially independent of said DC drift and offset; filtering said predetermined product signal out of said output signal; and synchronously rectifying said product signal in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide a DC signal which is said indication of the product of said two arbitrary signals.

Description

' United States Patent 1 Coor [ Feb. 18,1975
[75] Inventor: Thomas Coor, Princeton, NJ. [73] Assignee: Princeton Applied Research Corporation, Princeton, NJ.
[22] Filed: Jan. 26, 1973 [21] Appl. No.: 327,145
[52] US. Cl 235/181, 328/133, 328/160, 328/167, 329/50, 235/194 [51] Int. Cl. G06g 7/19, G06g 7/16 [58] Field of Search 235/181 194; 328/127, 328/160, 133, 134, 167; 329/50; 307/232 [56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,710,348 6/1955 Baum et al 235/194 3,017,108 l/1962 Kalbfell 235/194 3,036,273 5/1962 Holbrook et a1 329/50 3,168,645 2/1965 Jakowatz 235/194 3,319,172 5/1967 Tong Yuan Tong... 329/50 3,424,990 l/1968 Escobosa 329/50 3,428,794 2/1969 Norsworthy 235/181 3,517,879 6/1970 Conway 235/181 3,550,023 12/1970 Vivian..; 328/127 3,553,723 l/197l Ohnsorg... 235/181 3,614,407 10/1971 Fournier.. 235/181 3,746,851 7/1973 Gilbert 235/194 3,774,125 11/1973 Condon 328/167 OTHER PUBLICATIONS v Korn & Korn, (Textbook), Electronics Analog Com- McGrawHill 1956, pages 270-275.
Primary ExaminerFelix D. Gruber Attorney, Agent, or FirmBain, Gilfillain & Rhodes [57] ABSTRACT Providing an indication of the product of two arbitrary signals utilizing an electronic multiplier whose output 1 signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in said multiplier, wherein prior to multiplying said signals in said multiplier, multiplying one of said signals with a predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide ,said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, multiplying said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other of said signals in said multiplier to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined product signal repetitivelypolarity reversed in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, the output signal from said multiplier comprised of said predetermined product signal and said DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude of said predetermined product signal is proportional substantially only to the actual product of said signals and is substantially independent of said DC drift and offset; filtering said predetermined product signal out of said output signal; and synchronously rectifying said product signal in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide a DC signal which is said indication of the product of said two arbitrarysignals.
puters, Multipliers and Function Generators, 61 Claims, 14 Drawing Figures 10 I-"'-' I MEANS FOR POLARITY REVERSING REVERSING 0R SIGNALS j" 7 I COMMUTATING w (5!;72 CAPACITOR c SQUARE WAVE 1 AT GEN- +2 ARBITRARY A LINEAR l L SGNAL/ 1 ML LTIPLIER R I X 1 52 DP V AMP Eour= l AXB ARBITRARY L,
SIGNAL/ I I I I (AXB) {:l-2 l l l l w J I ARBITRARY PAIENIEBTEII Isms ARBITRARY O- I SIGNAL ARBITRARY .sIG NAL FIG-1 (PRIOR 'ART) SHEEI 1 OF ,4
4 FIG; 2
- ARBITRARY sIGNAL MULTIPLIER ARBITRARY B SIGNAL FIGI3 ARBITRARY SIGNAL MULTIPLIER SQUARE WAVE sIGNAL 50 AT ARBITRARY FREQUENCY :Fr I ASSUMES ONLY VALUESzH (OTI-IERwIsE ARBITRARY A SIGNAL SQUARE WAVE SIGNAL 5 AT ARBITRARYJ FREQUENCY Fr ASSUMES ONLY VALUES i'l (OTHERWISE ARBIT RARY) LOGIC Ocf'sIGNAL (Ax a) s+ O ORIF LINEAR (Axsy T- AN 3 R D.C'.AMPLIFIER AND Low-PAss FILTER 4*D.C.INDICATING MEANS D OFFSET. I
SIGNAL PRODUCT POLARITY REvERsI NG sI GNALs GENERATOR (AXB) :S+ 0c DRIFT AND OFFSET INDICAT I NG ME A NS RESPONDING UTILIZATION s+ DC DRIFT AND 12 I OFFSET f I SIGNAL I PRODUCT INO GATING I OR POLAFUTY UTILIZATION REVERSING MEANS G NALS- RESPONDI NG GENERATOR AT Pmmmrm s Y 3.867. 620
SHEET 30? 4 MEANS FOR REVERSING FIG 10 r OR 71 COMMUTATING V {1/072 CAPACITOR GEN. a; i f .AT 1: w
EIN w INDICATING Y MEANS 0 MEANS FOR REVERSING OR COMMUTATING 3%? CAPAZITQR GEN 0 W A/ EIN c [C2 AMP V v MEANS FOR I REVER$|NG .F O A 7 COMMUTATING- SQU E CAPACITOR WAVE C c GEN-f1. M2 AT 5; a ,5/ 0 WV Em Q9 AMP c AMP SIGNAL CORRELATOR WITH IMPROVED DYNAMIC RANGE CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS This invention is related to the invention of US. Pat. No. 3,793,599, issued Feb. 19, 1974 and assigned to the same assignee as the presentinvention BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION output signal includes, inherently, DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in the electronic multipliers, such DC drift and offset being due to the sensitivity of the electronic multiplier components to temperature, humidity and very large signals. Such DC drift and offset. as known to those skilled in the art, severely limits the dynamic range of the signal correlators and hence places a floor on the minimum value of A X B that can be decerned in prior art signal correlators.
By dynamicrange is meant, with regard to any two-part input device whose output reading is a measure of the correlation of two input signals applied to the two input ports, the ratio of:
1. that output reading of the device (even though the device may be incapable of producing such output reading) which would correspond to input signals applied to each input port with each signal having an amplitude verging on' overload and wherein in fact such signals are fully correlated,
.2. that output reading of the device which would-correspond to input signals applied to each input port with each signal having an amplitude verging on overload and wherein in fact such signals are completely uncorrelated.
SUMMARY The signal correlator of the present invention has improved dynamic rangedue to the utilization of novel signal multiplication techniques and novel square wave filtering techniques.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 9 illustrates a cascade of rotating capacitor square wave filters;
FIG. 10 illustrates a manner in which a DC indication of amplitude of a filtered square wave signal can be provided; and
FIGS. 11 and 12 illustrate various utilizations of the rotating capacitor square wave filter of the present invention; and
FIGS. 13 and 14 are signal correlators according to the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION Referring to the prior art and to FIG. 1, arbitrary signals A and B are fed into and electronically multiplied by an electronic multiplier M1 to provide the signal product, (A X B) in the output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml, however, as noted above, due to circuit imperfections in the electronic multiplier M1 the output signal of the electronic multiplier will also include DC drift and offset adversely affecting the signal product (A X B). As is known to those skilled in the art, the
output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml may be fed into indicating means for providing an indication of the signal product (A X B), or the time average of the signal product, e.g. the DC amplifier and low-pass filter and DC indicating means shown in FIG. I; alternatively, the output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml may be fed into signal product (A 'X B) utilization means, e.g. a servo motor. As noted above, the DC drift and offset inherently present in the output signal of the electronicmultiplier M1 will adversely affect both the indication of the signal product (A X B) or the utilization of the signal product (A X B).
Referring now to FIG. 2 and to the process of and apparatus for electronically multiplying arbitrary signals in accordance with the present invention, there are shown an electronic multiplier Ml, which may be for example any one of several four-quadrant linear electronic multipliers known to the art; an electronic multiplier or modulator M2, which may be for example any one of several switching. type phase reversing multipliers known to the art; a polarity reversing signal generator 9, which may be for example any one of several square wave signal generators known to the art; and
signal product indicating or utilization means .12, which may be for example an AC servo motor or an RC high pass filter and synchronous rectifier.
More particularly, prior to electronically multiplying the arbitrary signals A and B in the electronic multiplier M1, either one of the arbitrary signals, e.g., arbitrary signal B, is fed into the switching type phase reversing electronic multiplier M2 where it is multiplied by the predetermined polarity reversing signals S which 4 signal S, as shown in FIG. 2, is also fed into the electronic multiplier M2. The effect of feeding arbitrary signal B, and polarity reversing signal S into the electronic multiplier M2 is to provide at the output of the electronic multiplier M2 arbitrarysignal B repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of the predetermined polarity reversing signal S; signal B repetitively'reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of polarity reversing signal S being represented by the symbolization B IS. I
Signal B repetitively reversed in polarity and signal A are fed into electronic multiplier Ml where. they are electronically multiplied to provide the product of the signals in the form of a predetermined product signal 3 repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of the polarity. reversing signal S; this product signal is designated by the symbolization (A X B) S. The output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml will be comprised of the product signal (A X B) l S and the DC drift and offset which will be present in the output signal of the electronic multiplier M1 due to circuit imperfections in the electronic multiplier M1; the output signal of the electronic multiplier including the product signal (A X B) 4S and DC drift and offset is shown graphically in the upper righthand portion of FIG. 2. In accordance with the teaching of the present invention, it willbe understood that the peak-to-peak amplitude of the product signal (A X B) S will be proportional substantially only to the actual product of the signals (A X B) and will be substantially independent of the DC drift and offset present in the output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml.
The output signal of the electronic multiplier Ml shown in the upper-right hand portion of FIG. 2 has utility directly, for example, such signal may be used to directly drive an AC servo motor whose reference winding is driven in accordance with the polarity reversing signal S whereupon the output torque of the AC servo motor will be proportional directly to the signal product (A X B) and will be substantially independent of the DC drift and offset; alternately, the output signal of the electronic multiplier M1 may be passed through an RC high pass filter and fed into a synchronous rectifier driven in accordance with the polarity reversing signal S to provide a DC signal which will be the product (A X B) substantially without the DC offset and drift. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that such AC servo motor and RC high pass filter and synchronous rectifier are merely two specific examples of the signal product indicating or utilization means 12 shown in FIG. 2, and that many other signal product indicating or utilization means may directly utilize the output signal of the electronic multiplier M1.
It will be understood by those skilled in the signal multiplication art, that in accordance with the present invention, the repetitive polarity reversal of signal B as taught with regard to FIG. 2 may be done either periodically or aperiodically in accordance with the periodicity characteristic of the polarity reversing signal S. Further, it will be understood that the polarity reversing signal S may be, for example, a square wave signal which may be either symmetrical or non-symmetrical.
Further, it will be understood that the product signal (A X B) 4S will be repetitively polarity reversed periodically or aperiodically in accordance with the period icity characteristic of the polarity reversing signal S,
' ther a symmetrical or non-symmetrical signal in accordance with the symmetrical or non-symmetrical characteristic of the square wave polarity reversing signal S.
A still more specific understanding of the present invention may be provided by a description of a specific embodiment of the diagrammatic presentation shown in FIG. 2 wherein the polarity reversing signal S was a symmetrical square wave signal of arbitrary frequency f (arbitrary in the sense that it is not related to the frequency of either arbitrary signal A not necessarily B), and wherein the electronic multiplier M1 was a fourquadrant electronic multiplier, and wherein the electronic multiplier M2 was a phase-reversing switching type modulator or multiplier. In such specific embodiment, arbitrary signal B will have its polarity repetitively reversed at the frequencyf i.e. the arbitrary frequency of the polarity reversing signal S, and in this instance the output of the electronic multiplier M2 may be represented by the symbolization B 1f which represents symbolically arbitrary signal B repetitively polarity reversed at frequency f,-. Consequently, the output signal of the four-quadrant linear electronic multiplier M1 will also be repetitively polarity reversed at the frequencyf,-, and hence, the output product signal of electronic multiplier Ml may be represented by the symbolization (A X B) 4 f,- which symbol represents the product (A X B) repetitively polarity reversed at frequency f,-. In such instance, a frequency translation has been effected with the information of interest, product of signal A times B, (A X B), appearing at the frequencyfland odd harmonics thereof. DC drift and offset present in the output of electronic multiplier M1 due to the circuit imperfections therein will still appear, of course, in its output signal but such DC drift and offset will not have been translated to the new frequencies,fi, 3f.-, 5f.-, (2n l)f,-, What has in effect been accomplished is similar to what happens in superhetrodyne circuits, except that in the present case there are no image responses and the intermediate frequency is not a single frequency but instead is a multiplicity of frequencies (2n l)f,-, wherein n is the sequence of non-negative integers.
It will be understood by those skilled in the art that wherein in the practice of the present invention the polarity reversing signal S is a square wave signal of frequency f,-, the signal product indicating or utilization means 12, such as for example the above-noted AC servo motor and RC high pass filter and synchronous rectifier, would be driven or operated at the frequency f,-, i.e. the frequency of the polarity reversing signal S.
A still further understanding of arbitrary signal multipli'cation in accordance with the present invention is presented as follows: two arbitrary signals aremultiplied in an electronic multiplier to obtain their product independent of DC drift and offset present in the output signal in the electronic multiplier due to circuit imperfections in the electronic multiplier by (i) multiplying the signals in an electronic multiplier to obtain a first product; (ii) reversing the polarity of one of the signals and multiplying the signal of reversed polarity times the other signal in the electronic multiplier to obtaiii a second product; (iii) subtracting the second product from the first product to obtain their difference; and (iv) taking one half of the difference whereby the product of the signals is provided independentof the DC drift and offset. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that such signal multiplication may be accomplished in an electronic multiplier such as a linear multiplier'as shown in FIG. 2, that the subtraction of the second product from the first product may be performed electronically in any one of several signal subtracting circuits, or manually, and that one half of the difference of the product may be accomplished electronically in any one of several electronic vention which further embodiments are particularly useful wherein one of the arbitrary signals is a square wave signal at arbitrary frequency f, which assumes only values of +1 or -I a situation commonly found in signal multiplication situations, e.g. signal multiplication situations as are present in phase sensitive detectors, lock-in amplifiers, vector voltmeters, etc.
In the embodiments of FIGS. 3 and 4, the linear multiplier Ml of FIG. 2 is replaced with a switching type phase reversing multiplier or modulator M3 (FIG. 3) and M6 (FIG. 4), such switching. type phase reversing modulators or multipliers being less expensive and having inherently greater dynamic range than linear multi pliers.
In the embodiment of FIG. 3, square Wave signal B of arbitrary frequency], and the polarity reversing sig nal S are fed into a suitable logic multiplier M4 (e.g. an exclusive-or circuit" known to the logic signal multiplication art) to provide signal B repetitively polarity reversed in accordance with the sign of the predetermined polarity reversing signal S. Signal B, repetitively polarity reversed, and signal A are then fed into the switching type phase reversing multiplier or modulator M3 to provide the product A X B) in the form of the product signal (A X B) S as shown graphically in the upper righthand portion of FIG.'2. As with the output signal of the linear multiplier Ml of FIG. 2, the output signal of switching type phase reversing modulator M3 will include both the product signal (A X B) lS and the DC drift and offset inherent in the output signal of multiplier M3 due to circuit imperfections therein; the output signal of the switching type phase reversing modulator M3 being the same as shown graphically in the upper righthand portion of FIG. 2 for the output signal of linear multiplier M1 of FIG. 2.
Referring now specifically to FIG. 4, in the embodiment of FIG. 4, arbitrary signal A andthe polarity reversing signal S are fed into the switching type phase reversing modulator M5 to provide signal A repetitively polarity reversed in accordance with the sign of the polarity reversing signal S. Signal A, repetitively polarity reversed, and signal B, the square wave signal of arbitrary frequency f, assuming only logic values +1 or I, are fed intothe switching type phase reversing modulator M6 to provide the product (A X B) in the form of the product signal (A X B) ',S repetitively polarity reversed in'accordance with the sign of the polarity reversing signal S; similarly, with regard to the embodiments of FIGS. 2 and 3, the output signal of the switching type phase reversing modulator M6 will in- I clude the product signal (A X B) S and the DC drift and offset and the peak-to-peak amplitude of the product signal (A X B) 4 will be proportional substantially only to the actual product (A X B) and will be substantially independent of the DC drift and offset.
It will be understood by those skilled in the art that other than the specific differences taught with regard to the embodiments of FIGS. 3 and 4, the embodiments shown in FIGS. 3 and 4 operate the same as the embodiments shown and described in FIG. 2 with regard to the multiplication of the signals A and B, and that the signal product indication or utilization with regard to the embodiments of FIGS. 3 and 4 is the same as that taught with regard to the embodiment of FIG. 2.
Referring generally to FIGS. 5-8, there are shown various apparatus for practicing the processes of the present invention for filtering a square wave signal out of a composite signal including the square wave signal and other unwanted signals such as other AC signals, DC, noise, etc. Still further generally, it will be noted that each apparatus includes a capacitor C and an electrically associated resistor R which will be treated in 5 detail below.
With regard to the apparatus of FIG. 5, such apparatus is provided with an input and output as shown and includes resistor R connected in series with capacitor C which is connected to terminals T1 and T2 through .a double pole double throw (DDT) switch which upon being operated alternately reverses the connection of the capacitor C to the terminals T1 and T2l such apparatus being disclosed in the prior art by Y. Sun, Network Functions of Quadrature N-Path Filters, IEEE 'lrans. Circuit Theory, Vol. CT-l7, pp. 594-600, Novemeber 1970, and such apparatus being disclosed as having a small response at zero frequency and a response peak at the frequency fs, the frequency at which the DPDT switch is operated. However, and inaccordance with the teachings of the present invention, it has been discovered that the apparatus of FIG. 5 is unexpectedly useful for filtering a square wave signal of frequency f, out of acomposite signal including the square wave signal and other signals, and it has been further discovered that such apparatus has, in fact, ideal characteristics as a matched, narrow band filter for filtering a symmetrical, zero median squarewave signal at frequencyf, out of such composite signal.
Referring now to FIG. 6, the symbolization of the DPDT switch is replaced by a symbolization T2 reversed or commutated. Capacitor C may thus be 4O visualized or understood as being commutated, reversed or switched at a frequency f, between the terminals T1 and T2 with the switching operation being considered to be instantaneous. Such capacitor being referred to hereinafter as a rotating capacitor of frequency f,-,. the capacitor being carried through a full cycle of reversal or rotation in a time 1/i f,-. However, it will be further understoodthat the expression rotating capacitor is also used to include such embodiments as the capacitor C of FIG. 5 and well as any other embodiment ofsuch capacitor C for having its connection to a pair of terminals, such as terminals T1 and T2 reversed. The reversal of the connection of the rotating capacitor C at frequencyflmay be accomplished mechanically such as by the DPDT switch of FIG. 5, by a motor, or electrically such as by solid state switches operated at frequency f,; such reversing means not being shown in FIGS. 6 and 7.'
Shown in FIG. 7 is an embodiment wherein the resis- 6O tor C by being connected in parallel with the rotating tor R is electrically associated with the rotating capaci- Referring now to FIG. 8 there is shown novel apparatus utilizing'the rotating capacitor and which novel apparatus is particularly useful in practicing the filtering processes of the present invention. Shown in FIG. 8 is an operational amplifier A, which may be any one of several suitable operational amplifiers known to the art, an input resistor R1 and an amplifier feed-back network including resistor R and rotating capacitor C connected in parallel as shown in FIG. 8. The operational amplifier A is connected as an inverting summing amplifier and is provided with inputs and outputs as shown. Also shown schematically in FIG. 8 are suitable means for reversing or commutating rotating capacitor C at frequency f,-, such as for example, a suitable solid state switch or switches referred to above.
It will be further understood by those skilled in the art that the apparatus includedin the dash rectangular outline shown in FIGS. -8, and given general numerical designation 10, is referred to hereinafter as a rotating capacitor square wave signal filter.
Referring now specifically to the practice of the pro cesses of the present invention as may be practiced by each of the rotating capacitor square wave signal filters of FIGS. 5-8 for filtering a zero median value square wave signal having known transitions, i.e., a zero median value square wave signal of known phase and frequency and which known frequency will be referred to as frequency f,-, out ofa composite signal including such square wave signal and other signals, such as other AC signals, other AC signals and DC, noise,.etc., such composite signal is applied to the input of such rotating capacitor square wave signal filter and the connection of Y the rotating capacitor C is repetitively reversed to the terminals T1 and T2 in synchronism with the transitions of the square wave signal to be filtered, i.e., the rotating capacitor C has its connection to the terminals T1 and T2 reversed in phase with and at the frequency f,- of the square wave signal to be filtered out ofthe composite signal. The rotating capacitor C and its electrically associated resistor R are chosen such that their RC time constant is much greater than the period of the square wave signal to be filtered, hence, substantially only the median value square wave signal will appear or be provided across theoutput of the rotating capacitor'square wave signal filters; the other signals of the composite signal, in particular DC, being rejected or attenuated and substantially not passing through said rotating capacitor square wave filter. More particularly, in the rotating capacitor square wave filters of FIGS. 5-7, the filtered square wave signal will appear across the terminals T1 and T2 to which the output of the filters is connected, and in the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10 of FIG. 8 the filtered square wave signal will appear across the output of the inverting summing amplifier. v
Referring again specifically to FIG. 8, the filtered square wave signal provided at the output of the inverting summing amplifier will be amplified .by a factor equal to the resistor ratio, R/Rl.-The band-width of the rotating capacitor square wave filter of FIG. 8 is proportional to l/RC, and is best described as a synchronous matched filter for zero median value-square waves, especially, symmetrical square waves of zero median value.
wave signal filters of FIG. 5-8 that where the zero median value square wave signal to be filtered is a symmetrical square wave and where the other signals of said composite signal are other AC signals and/or DC signals, substantially only the symmetrical square wave signal appears or is provided at the output of the filter; that where the zero median value square wave signal is Y a non-symmetrical square wave signal and where the other signals of the composite signal are other AC signals, substantially only the non-symmetrical square wave signal appears or is provided at the output of the filter; and that where the zero median value square wave signal is a non-symmetrical square wave and the other signals are other AC signals and DC signal, substantially only said non-symmetrical square wave signal and portions of said DC signal appear or are provided at the output of the filter.
In accordance with the further teachings of the present invention, it has been found that sharper response characteristics can be achieved by cascading two or more rotating capacitor square wave filters l0, operated in synchronism at frequency f,-, as illustrated in FIG. 9.
APPLICATIONS OF ROTATING CAPACITOR SQUARE WAVE FILTERS It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the above-described rotating capacitor square wave filters will have numerous applications in instrumentation and communication electronic circuitry.
For example, the measurement of small amplitud square wave signals of known frequency and phase in the presence of large amplitude noise can be accomplished advantageously by combining the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10, of FIGS. 5-8 with a synchronous rectifier or detector such as a.switching type phase reversing multiplier or demodulator MI as shown in FIG. 10, the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10 of FIG. 8 being actually shown in FIG. 9, however, it will be understood that the rotating capacitor squarewave filters 10 of FIGS. 5-7 could also be combined with the multiplier M1 of FIG. 10. The multiplier M1, or synchronous rectifier or demodulator, is oper ated in synchronism with the transitions of the filtered square wave signal and'the reversing of the rotating capacitor C. More specifically, the multiplier M1 may receive the filtered square wave signal and a square wave signal in phase with and at the frequency f,- of the filtered square wave signal, which may be provided by a suitable square wave generator 14 (which generator may also be used to operate the means for reversing or commutating the rotatingcapacitor C as shown), and the phase-reversing switching type multiplier MI will multiply or synchronously rectify or demodulate, the received squarewave signalsand provide a DC signal which will be proportional to the amplitude of the filtered square wave signal. Such DC signal may be indicated by suitable DC indicating means such as the DC meter shown. With regard to such DC signal being proportional to the magnitude of the filtered square wave signal, if the gain of the filter. e.g. the ratio of the frequency f,-. The response to input noise and offfrequency (not f,-) Coherent signals can be made arbitrarily small by reducing the bandwidth (l/RC) of the rotating capacitor square wave filter, i.e. by increasing the RC time constant. Because the signals of interest at point Q in FIG. 9 are zero median square wave signals of frequency f,-, and have been bandwidth limited to an arbitrary degree by the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10, the utility of the circuit of FIG. 10 may be advantageously enhanced by the addition of AC'amplification means, such as a suitable AC amplifier A1, andlor-suitable high pass filtering means C2-R2 such as shown in FIG. 11, wherein such AC amplifier and/or high pass filter are connected intermediate the output of the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10 and the synchronous rectifier or phase reversing switching type multiplier MI. The high pass filter, C2-R2, further removes any DC and low frequency signals included in the filtered composite signal prior to synchronous rectification by the multiplier M1, and prevents DC drifts and offsets from the operational amplifier A and AC amplifier A1 from being converted into square waves at the frequencyf by the multiplier, modulator, or synchronous rectifier, Ml.
It will be further understood by those skilled in th art that the apparatus or circuit of FIG. 11 is particularly useful for band limiting, detecting and measuring the amplitude of a small square wave signal in the presence of large noise. Further, because of the noiserejecting properties of the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10, the dynamic range requirements on the additional amplification means, e.g. AC amplifier A1, are greatly reduced.
A further application of the rotating capacitor filter 10 is in a carrier-type DC and low frequency amplifier as shown in FIG. 12. The circuit of FIG. 12 is the same as that shown in FIG. 11 except that a phase reversing switching type modulator, or multiplier, M2 has been added prior to the input of the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10.
The apparatus or circuit of FIG. 12 has been found to be particularly useful in amplifying only the, or substantially only the, DC and low frequency signals found in a composite signal including such DC and low fre quency signals and high frequency signals. Such composite signal is applied to theinput of the circuit whereupon the composite signal is modulated by modulator M2 by being repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of a square wave signal of frequency f,- wherein the frequency f,- is less than the period of the low frequency signals. The composite signal is then fed into the rotating capacitor square wave filter 10 and the balance of the circuit operates and functions as taught above with regard to the application circuit shown in FIG. 11.
The RC time constant is made much greater than the period ofthe square wave signalf; and is made less than the period of the low frequency signals to be amplified. The frequency response of the circuit of FIG. 12 is flat from DC out to a frequency f 1/21rRC where it will begin to fall off at approximately 6 db. per octave. There are no spurious responses for input frequencies at or near frequency f,-, nor for any frequency whatsoever.
SIGNAL CORRELATOR OF IMPROVED DYNAMIC RANGE The signal correlator of improved dynamic range is provided by the unique combinations of the signal multiplication processes and apparatus taught above with regard to FIGS. 1-4, and the square wave filtering processes and apparatus taught above with regard to FIGS. 5-12, as illustrated by way of specific example in FIG. 13.
The signal multiplication section 14, depending upon whether the signals A and B are both arbitrary. or whether one of the signals assumes only the value +1 or l otherwise arbitrary, may be any one of the signal multiplication circuits of FIGS. 2-4, with the embodiment of FIG. 2 being shown specifically .in FIG. 13'. such circuits operating as taught above. Similarly, the square wave filtering section may be any one of the embodiments l0,of FIGS. 5-9, with such circuits operating as taught above. Similarly, the balance of the signal correlator shown in FIG. 13 may be the same as the balance of the circuit of FIG. 11 after the initial square wave filter portion, and will operate in the same manner to provide. the DC signal indication or output.
The output of the signal correlator of FIG. 13 will be a DC voltage proportional to the exponentially weighted time average of the product of the arbitrary inputsignals A and B, with the averaging time T equal to the time constant RC of the rotating capacitor C and its electrically associated resistor R.
A hybrid analogue-digital circuit for accomplishing the square wave filtering and synchronous detection means is shown in FIG. 14. It is similar to that described in the literature by Morris and Johnston, E. D. Morris and Harold S. Johnston, Digital Phase Sensitive Detector, RSI 39, p. 620 I968). The novel signal multiplication technique is combined with a voltage to frequency converter and an up/down counter, operated at frequency f,-,.to accomplish the detection of the square wave from the multiplier M1.
It will be understood by those skilled in the art that many modifications may be made in the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope thereof.
What is claimed is: v
l. The signal correlation process with improved dynamic range for providing anindication of the time average of the product of two arbitrary signals, which signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in said multiplier comprising the steps of:
prior to multiplying said signals in said multiplier,
multiplyingone of said signals with a predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal; multiplying said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other of said signals in said multiplier to provide the product of-said signals in the form of a predetermined product signal repetitively polarity reversed in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, the output signal from said multiplier comprised of said predetermined product signal and said DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude of said predetermined product signal is proporprocess utilizes an electronic multiplier whose output tional substantially only to the actual product of said signals and is substantially independent of said DC drift and offset;
synchronously filtering said Output signal of said electronic multiplier in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to attenuate said DC drift and offset thereby to provide an AC out- .put signal; and
synchronously rectifying said AC output signal in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide a DC signal which is said indication of the time average of the product-of said two arbitrary signals.
2. The process according to claim 1 wherein said repetitive polarity reversal of said one signal is done aperiodically.
3. The process according to claim 1 wherein said repetitive polarity reversal of said one signal is done periodically. I v v 4. The process according to claim 3 wherein said predetermined polarity reversing signal is a square wave signal and wherein said predetermined product signal is a square wave signal.
5. The process according to claim 4 wherein said square wave signals are symmetrical square wave signals.
6. The process according to claim 1 wherein said synchronous filtering of said output signal of said electronic multiplier comprises the steps of:
applying said output signal of said electronic multiplier tothe input of a rotating capacitor square wave signal filter including a rotating capacitor C connected between terminals T1 and T2 and an electrically associated resistor R; and
repetitively reversing the connection of said capacitor C to said terminals T1 and T2 in synchronism with the polarity reversal of said predetermined product signal whereby, upon the RC time constant of said resistor R and said capacitor C being much greater than the period of' said predetermined product signal, substantially only said predetermined product signal being provided at the output of said rotating capacitor square wave signal filter.
7. The process according to claim 6 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C' and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a voltage signal and is applied across the series connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
8. The process according to claim 6 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in parallel with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronicmultiplier is a current signal and is applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
9. The process according to claim 6 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C and resistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said AC output signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier.
10. The process according to claim 1 wherein said synchronous rectification is accomplished by feeding said 'AC output signal and a predetermined signal in phase with and at the same frequency of said predetermined product signal into a switching type phase reversing multiplier wherein said signals are multiplied and whereby the output signal of said switching type phase reversing multiplier is said DC signal.
11. The process according to claim 1 including the additional step of amplifying said AC output signal subsequent to said synchronous-filtering and prior to said synchronous rectification.
12. The process according to claim 1 including the additional step of passing said AC output signal through a high pass filter to further remove any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal, said additional step being accomplished subsequent to said synchronous filtering and prior to said synchronous rectification.
13. The process according to claim 1 including the additional steps of amplifying said AC output signal and passing said amplified AC output signal through a high pass filter to further remove any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal, said additional steps being accomplished subsequent to said synchronous filtering and prior to said synchronous rectification.
14. The process according to claim 1 wherein said multiplication of said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other is accomplished by phase reversal modulation and wherein one of saidarbitrary sig nals assumes only the values of +1 or 1 and wherein said one arbitrary signal is the arbitrary signal which is multiplied with said predetermined polarity reversing signal. 1
15. The process according to claim 1 wherein said multiplication of said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other is accomplished by phase reversal modulation and wherein one of said arbitrary signals assumes only the values +1 or 1 and wherein the other of said arbitrary signals is the arbitrary signal which is multiplied with said polarity reversing'signal.
16. The signal correlation process with improved dynamic range for providing an indication proportional to the exponentially weighted time average of characteristic time T of the product of two arbitrary signals A and B, i.e. A X B which process utilizes an electronic multiplier whose output signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in the electronic multiplier, comprising the steps of:
multiplying signal B with a predetermined square wave signal of frequencyf to provide signal B repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined square wave signal;
multiplying signal B repetitively reversed in polarity times arbitrary signal A in said electronic multiplier to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined square wave product signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined square wave signal in phase therewith and at the frequency thereof f,-, the output signal of said electronic multiplier comprised of said predetermined square wave product signal and said DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude of said predetermined square wave product signal is proportional only to the actual product of said signals A and B and is substantially independent of said DC drift and offset;
. 13 synchronously filtering said output signal of said electronic multiplier in synehronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to attenuate said DC drift and offset and provide an AC output signal by: v
i. applying said output signal ofsaid electronic multiplier to a rotating capacitor square wave filter including a capacitor C and an electrically associated resistor R, said capacitor C being connected between terminals T1 and T2, and
ii. repetitively reversing the connection of said capacitor C to said terminalsTl and T2 in phase with and at the frequency f,- of said predetermined square wave signal whereby, upon the RC time constant of said resistor R and capacitor C- frequency f,- of said predetermined square wave signal to provide a DC signal which is said indication proportional to the exponentially weighted time average of the product of arbitrary signals A and B with characteristic time T where T equals the RC time constant of said rotating capacitor C and said electrically associated resistor R. 17. The process according to claim 16 wherein said repetitive polarity reversal of said signal B is done aperiodically.
-18..The process according to claim 16 wherein said repetitive polarity reversal of said signal B is done periodically. v
19. The process according to claim 16 wherein said predetermined square wave signal and said predetermined-square wave product signal. are symmetricalsquare wave signals.
20. The process according to claim 16 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a voltage signal and is applied across the series connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
21. The process according to claim 16 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in parallel with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a current signal and is applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R 'and saidcapacitor C.
22. The process according to claim 16 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C andresistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein substantially only said predetermined square wave product signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier. I
23, The process according to claim 16 wherein said synchronous rectification is accomplished by feeding said AC output signal and asecond predetermined square'wave signal 'in phase with and at the same frelow frequency signals included in said AC output signal, said additional step'being accomplished subsequent to said synchronous filtering and prior to said synchronous rectification.
26. The process according to claim 1-6 including the additional steps of amplifying said AC output signal and passing said amplified AC output signal through a high pass filter to further remove any DC and low frequency signal included insaid AC output signal, said additional steps being accomplished subsequent to said synchronous filtering and prior to said synchronous rectification.
27. The process according to claim 16 wherein said multiplication of said signal 3 repetitively reversed in polarity times arbitrarysignal A is accomplished by phase-reversal modulation and wherein arbitrary signal B assumes only the values +1 or 1.
28. The process according to claim 16 wherein said multiplication of said signal B repetitivelyreversed in polarity times arbitrary signal A is accomplished by phase-reversal modulationand wherein arbitrary signal A assumes only the values +1 or l.
29. Signal correlator apparatus with improved dynamic range for providing an indication of the time average-of the product of two arbitrary signals, which apparatus utilizes an electronic multiplier whose output signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in said multiplier, comprising:
additional multiplier means for. multiplying one of said signals with a predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, said electronic multiplier for multiplying said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other of said signals to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined product signal repetitively polarity reversed in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, the output signal from said electronic multiplier comprised of said predetermined product signal and said-DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude of said predetermined product signal is proportional substantially only to 'the actual product of said signals and is substantially independent of said- DC drift and offset; synchronous filter means for filtering said output signal of said electronic multiplier in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to is said indication of the time average of the product of said two arbitrary signals. v
30. Apparatus according to claim 29 wherein said additional multiplier meansare multiplier means for providing said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity aperiodically.
3]. Apparatus according to claim 29 wherein said additional multiplier means includes anelectronic multiplier. v
32. Apparatus according to claim 31 wherein said electronic multiplier is a switching type phase reversing modulator.
33. Apparatus according to claim 31 wherein said electronic multiplier is a logic multiplier.
34. Apparatus according to claim 33 wherein said logic multiplier is an exclusive-or circuit.
35. Apparatus according to claim 31 wherein said additional multiplier means further includes means for generating a square wave signal which square wave' signal is said predetermined polarity reversing signal.
36. Apparatus according to claim 35 wherein said means for generating said square wave signal are means for generating a symmetrical square wave signal.
37. Apparatus according to claim 29 wherein said synchronous filter means for filtering said output signal of said electronic multiplier comprises:
a rotating capacitor square wave filter including a rotating capacitor C, connected between terminals T1 and T2, and an electrically associated resistor.
41. Apparatus according to claim 29 wherein said synchronous rectifying means includes a signal generator for providing a predetermined square wave signal in phase with and atthe same frequency of said predetermined product signal and a switching type phase revcrsing multiplier for receiving said AC output signal and said predetermined square wave signal and for multiplying said signals and for providing said DC signal.
42. Apparatus according to claim 29 further including amplifying means connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying said AC output signal.
43. Apparatus according to claim 29 further including a high pass filter connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectify- 1 ing means and for further filtering said AC output sig- R. said rotating capacitor square wave filter having an input for receiving said output signal of said electronic multiplier; and
means for repetitively reversing the connection of said capacitor C tosa'id terminals T1 and T2 in snychronism with the polarity reversal of said predetermined product signal whereby, upon said output signal of said electronic multiplier being applied to said input and upon the RC time constant of said resistor R and said capacitor C being much greater than the period of said predetermined product signal, substantially only saidpredetermined product signal is provided at the output of said rotating capacitor square wavefilter.
38. Apparatus according to claim 37 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a voltage signal and is applied across the series connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
39. Apparatus according to claim 37 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in parallel with said capacitor C and wherein said output-signal of said electronic multiplier is a current signal andis applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
40. Apparatus according to claim 37 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C and resistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein substantially only said predetermined product signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier.
nal by further removing any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal.
44. Apparatus according to claim 29 further including amplifying means and a high pass filter connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying and further filtering said AC output signal to further remove any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal.
45. Signal correlator apparatus with improved dynamic range for providing an indication proportional to the exponentially weighted time average ofcharacteristic time T of the product of two arbitrary signals A and B, i.e. A X B which apparatus utilizes an electronic multiplier whose output signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in the electronic multiplier, comprising:
additional multiplier means-for multiplying signal B with a predetermined square wave signal of frequency f. to provide signal B repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined square wave signal;
said electronic multiplier for multiplying signal B repetitively reversed in polarity times arbitrary signal A to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined square wave product signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined square wave signal in phase therewith and at the frequency thereof f,-, the output signal of said electronic multiplier comprised of said predetermined square-wave product signal and said DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude 'of said predetermined square wave product signal is proportional only to the actual product of said signals A and B and is substantially independent of said DC drift and offset; a synchronous filter means for filtering said output signal of said electronic multiplier in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to attenuate said DC drift and offset, thereby to provide an AC output signal, said synchronous filter means including: i. a rotating capacitor square wave filter including a capacitor C and an electrically associated resistor R, said capacitor C being connected between terminals T1 and T2, and ii. means for repetitively reversing the connection of said capacitor C to said terminals T1 and T2 in phase with and at the frequency f,-'of said predetermined square wave signal whereby, upon the RC time constant of said resistor Rand capacitor C being much greater than the period of said predetermined square wave product signal, said AC output signal comprising substantially only said predetermined square wave product signal is provided at the output of said rotating capacitor square wave filter; and
means for synchronously rectifying said AC output signal in phase with andat the frequency f of said predetermined square wave signal to provide a DC signal which is said indication proportional to the exponentially weighted time average ofthe product of arbitrary signals A and B with characteristic time T, where T equals the RC time constant of said rotating capacitor C and said electrically associated resistor R.
46. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said additional multiplier means are multiplier means for providing said signal B repetitively reversed in polarity aperiodically.
47. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said additional multiplier means include an electronic multiplier.
48. Apparatus according to claim 47 wherein said electronic multiplier is a switching type phase reversing modulator.
49. Apparatus according to claim 47 wherein said electronic multiplier is a logic multiplier.
50. Apparatus according to claim 49 wherein said logic multiplier is an exclusive-or circuit.
51. Apparatus according to claim 47 wherein said additional multiplier means further include a square wave generator for generating said predetermined square wave signal of frequency f,-.
52. Apparatus according to claim 51 wherein said square wave generator is for generating a symmetrical square wave signal.
53. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C and 18 wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a current signal and is applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
55. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C and resistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the' input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein substantially only said predetermined square wave product signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier.
56. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said synchronous rectifying means include a square wave signal generator for providing a second predetermined square wave signal in phase with and at the same frequency f,- of said predetermined square wave product signal and a switching type phase reversing multiplier for receiving said AC output signal and said second predetermined square wave signal and for multiplying said signals and for providing said DC signal.
57. Apparatus according to claim 45 further including amplifying means connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying said AC output signal.
58. Apparatus according'to claim further including a high pass filter connected intermediate said syn- A chronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for further filtering said AC output signal by further removing any DC and low frequency sig nals included in said AC output signal.
59. Apparatus according to claim 45 further including amplifying means and a high pass filter connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and-said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying and further filtering said AC output signal to further remove any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal.
' R connected in parallel with said capacitor C and 60. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said electronic multiplier is a linear multiplier.
61. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said electronic multiplier is a switching type phase reversing

Claims (61)

1. The signal correlation process with improved dynamic range for providing an indication of the time average of the product of two arbitrary signals, which process utilizes an electronic multiplier whose output signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in said multiplier comprising the steps of: prior to multiplying said signals in said multiplier, multiplying one of said signals with a predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal; multiplying said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other of said signals in said multiplier to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined product signal repetitively polarity reversed in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, the output signal from said multiplier comprised of said predetermined product signal and said DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude of said predetermined product signal is proportional substantially only to the actual product of said signals and is substantially independent of said DC drift and offset; synchronously filtering said output signal of said electronic multiplier in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to attenuate said DC drift and offset thereby to provide an AC output signal; and synchronously rectifying said AC output signal in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide a DC signal which is said indication of the time average of the product of said two arbitrary signals.
2. The process according to claim 1 wherein said repetitive polarity reversal of said one signal is done aperiodically.
3. The process according to claim 1 wherein said repetitive polarity reversal of said one signal is done periodically.
4. The process according to claim 3 wherein said predetermined polarity reversing signal is a square wave signal and wherein said predetermined product signal is a square wave signal.
5. The process according to claim 4 wherein said square wave signals are symmetrical square wave signals.
6. The process according to claim 1 wherein said synchronous filtering of said output signal of said electronic multiplier comprises the steps of: applying said output signal of said electronic multiplier to the input of a rotating capacitor square wave signal filter including a rotating capacitor C connected between terminals T1 and T2 and an electrically associated resistor R; and repetitively reversing the connection of said capacitor C to said terminals T1 and T2 in synchronism with the polarity reversal of said predetermined product signal whereby, upon the RC time constant of said resistor R and said capacitor C being much greater than the period of said predetermined product signal, substantially only said predetermined product signal being provided at the output of said rotating capacitor square wave signal filter.
7. The process according to claim 6 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a voltage signal and is applied across the series connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
8. The process according to claim 6 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in parallel with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a current signal and is applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
9. The process according to claim 6 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C and resistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said AC output signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier.
10. The process according to claim 1 wherein said synchronous rectification is accomplished by feeding said AC output signal and a predetermined signal in phase with and at the same frequency of said predetermined product signal into a switching type phase reversing multiplier wherein said signals are multiplied and whereby the output signal of said switching type phase reversing multiplier is said DC signal.
11. The process according to claim 1 including the additional step of amplifying said AC output signal subsequent to said synchronous filtering and prior to said synchronous rectification.
12. The process according to claim 1 including the additional step of passing said AC output signal through a high pass filter to further remove any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal, said additional step being accomplished subsequent to said synchronous filtering and prior to said synchronous rectification.
13. The process according to claim 1 including the additional steps of amplifying said AC output signal and passing said amplified AC output signal through a high pass filter to further remove any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal, said additional steps being accomplished subsequent to said synchronous filtering and prior to said synchronous rectification.
14. The process according to claim 1 wherein said multiplication of said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other is accomplished by phase reversal modulation and wherein one of said arbitrary signals assumes only the values of +1 or -1 and wherein said one arbitrary signal is the arbitrary signal which is multiplied with said predetermined polarity reversing signal.
15. The process according to claim 1 wherein said multiplication of said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other is accomplished by phase reversal modulation and wherein one of said arbitrary signals assumes only the values +1 or -1 and wherein the other of said arbitrary signals is the arbitrary signal which is multiplied with said polarity reversing signal.
16. The signal correlation process with improved dynamic range for providing an indication proportional to the exponentially weighted time average of characteristic time T of the product of two arbitrary signals A and B, i.e. <A X B>T which process utilizes an electronic multiplier whose output signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in the electronic multiplier, comprising the steps of: multiplying signal B with a predetermined square wave signal of frequency fi to provide signal B repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined square wave signal; multiplying signal B repetitively reversed in polarity times arbitrary signal A in said electronic multiplier to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined square wave product signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined square wave signal in phase therewith and at the frequency thereof fi, the output signal of said electronic multiplier compriSed of said predetermined square wave product signal and said DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude of said predetermined square wave product signal is proportional only to the actual product of said signals A and B and is substantially independent of said DC drift and offset; synchronously filtering said output signal of said electronic multiplier in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to attenuate said DC drift and offset and provide an AC output signal by: i. applying said output signal of said electronic multiplier to a rotating capacitor square wave filter including a capacitor C and an electrically associated resistor R, said capacitor C being connected between terminals T1 and T2, and ii. repetitively reversing the connection of said capacitor C to said terminals T1 and T2 in phase with and at the frequency fi of said predetermined square wave signal whereby, upon the RC time constant of said resistor R and capacitor C being much greater than the period of said predetermined square wave product signal, said AC output signal comprising substantially only said predetermined square wave product signal is provided at the output of said rotating capacitor square wave filter; and synchronously rectifying said filtered predetermined square wave product signal in phase with and at the frequency fi of said predetermined square wave signal to provide a DC signal which is said indication proportional to the exponentially weighted time average of the product of arbitrary signals A and B with characteristic time T where T equals the RC time constant of said rotating capacitor C and said electrically associated resistor R.
17. The process according to claim 16 wherein said repetitive polarity reversal of said signal B is done aperiodically.
18. The process according to claim 16 wherein said repetitive polarity reversal of said signal B is done periodically.
19. The process according to claim 16 wherein said predetermined square wave signal and said predetermined square wave product signal are symmetrical square wave signals.
20. The process according to claim 16 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a voltage signal and is applied across the series connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
21. The process according to claim 16 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in parallel with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a current signal and is applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
22. The process according to claim 16 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C and resistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein substantially only said predetermined square wave product signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier.
23. The process according to claim 16 wherein said synchronous rectification is accomplished by feeding said AC output signal and a second predetermined square wave signal in phase with and at the same frequency fi of said predetermined square wave product signal into a switching type phase reversing multiplier wherein said signals are multiplied and whereby the output signal of said switching type hase reversing is said DC signal.
24. The process according to claim 16 including the additional step of amplifying said AC output signal subsequent to said synchronous filtering and prior to said synchronous rectiFication.
25. The process according to claim 16 including the additional step of passing said AC output signal through a high pass filter to further remove any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal, said additional step being accomplished subsequent to said synchronous filtering and prior to said synchronous rectification.
26. The process according to claim 16 including the additional steps of amplifying said AC output signal and passing said amplified AC output signal through a high pass filter to further remove any DC and low frequency signal included in said AC output signal, said additional steps being accomplished subsequent to said synchronous filtering and prior to said synchronous rectification.
27. The process according to claim 16 wherein said multiplication of said signal B repetitively reversed in polarity times arbitrary signal A is accomplished by phase-reversal modulation and wherein arbitrary signal B assumes only the values +1 or -1.
28. The process according to claim 16 wherein said multiplication of said signal B repetitively reversed in polarity times arbitrary signal A is accomplished by phase-reversal modulationand wherein arbitrary signal A assumes only the values +1 or -1.
29. Signal correlator apparatus with improved dynamic range for providing an indication of the time average of the product of two arbitrary signals, which apparatus utilizes an electronic multiplier whose output signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in said multiplier, comprising: additional multiplier means for multiplying one of said signals with a predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, said electronic multiplier for multiplying said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity times the other of said signals to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined product signal repetitively polarity reversed in accordance with the sign of said predetermined polarity reversing signal, the output signal from said electronic multiplier comprised of said predetermined product signal and said DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude of said predetermined product signal is proportional substantially only to the actual product of said signals and is substantially independent of said DC drift and offset; synchronous filter means for filtering said output signal of said electronic multiplier in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to attenuate said DC drift and offset thereby to provide an AC output signal; and means for synchronously rectifying said AC output signal in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to provide a DC signal which is said indication of the time average of the product of said two arbitrary signals.
30. Apparatus according to claim 29 wherein said additional multiplier means are multiplier means for providing said one signal repetitively reversed in polarity aperiodically.
31. Apparatus according to claim 29 wherein said additional multiplier means includes an electronic multiplier.
32. Apparatus according to claim 31 wherein said electronic multiplier is a switching type phase reversing modulator.
33. Apparatus according to claim 31 wherein said electronic multiplier is a logic multiplier.
34. Apparatus according to claim 33 wherein said logic multiplier is an exclusive-or circuit.
35. Apparatus according to claim 31 wherein said additional multiplier means further includes means for generating a square wave signal which square wave signal is said predetermined polarity reversing signal.
36. Apparatus according to claim 35 wherein said means for generating said square wave signal are means for generating a symmetrical square wave signal.
37. Apparatus according to claim 29 wherEin said synchronous filter means for filtering said output signal of said electronic multiplier comprises: a rotating capacitor square wave filter including a rotating capacitor C, connected between terminals T1 and T2, and an electrically associated resistor R, said rotating capacitor square wave filter having an input for receiving said output signal of said electronic multiplier; and means for repetitively reversing the connection of said capacitor C to said terminals T1 and T2 in snychronism with the polarity reversal of said predetermined product signal whereby, upon said output signal of said electronic multiplier being applied to said input and upon the RC time constant of said resistor R and said capacitor C being much greater than the period of said predetermined product signal, substantially only said predetermined product signal is provided at the output of said rotating capacitor square wave filter.
38. Apparatus according to claim 37 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a voltage signal and is applied across the series connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
39. Apparatus according to claim 37 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in parallel with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a current signal and is applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
40. Apparatus according to claim 37 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C and resistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein substantially only said predetermined product signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier.
41. Apparatus according to claim 29 wherein said synchronous rectifying means includes a signal generator for providing a predetermined square wave signal in phase with and at the same frequency of said predetermined product signal and a switching type phase reversing multiplier for receiving said AC output signal and said predetermined square wave signal and for multiplying said signals and for providing said DC signal.
42. Apparatus according to claim 29 further including amplifying means connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying said AC output signal.
43. Apparatus according to claim 29 further including a high pass filter connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for further filtering said AC output signal by further removing any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal.
44. Apparatus according to claim 29 further including amplifying means and a high pass filter connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying and further filtering said AC output signal to further remove any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal.
45. Signal correlator apparatus with improved dynamic range for providing an indication proportional to the exponentially weighted time average of characteristic time T of the product of two arbitrary signals A and B, i.e. <A X B>T which apparatus utilizes an electronic multiplier whose output signal will include DC drift and offset due to circuit imperfections in the electronic multiplier, comprising: additional multiplier means for multiplying signal B with a predetermined square wave signal of frequency fi to provide signal B repetitIvely reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined square wave signal; said electronic multiplier for multiplying signal B repetitively reversed in polarity times arbitrary signal A to provide the product of said signals in the form of a predetermined square wave product signal repetitively reversed in polarity in accordance with the sign of said predetermined square wave signal in phase therewith and at the frequency thereof fi, the output signal of said electronic multiplier comprised of said predetermined square wave product signal and said DC drift and offset and wherein the peak-to-peak amplitude of said predetermined square wave product signal is proportional only to the actual product of said signals A and B and is substantially independent of said DC drift and offset; synchronous filter means for filtering said output signal of said electronic multiplier in synchronism with said predetermined polarity reversing signal to attenuate said DC drift and offset, thereby to provide an AC output signal, said synchronous filter means including: i. a rotating capacitor square wave filter including a capacitor C and an electrically associated resistor R, said capacitor C being connected between terminals T1 and T2, and ii. means for repetitively reversing the connection of said capacitor C to said terminals T1 and T2 in phase with and at the frequency fi of said predetermined square wave signal whereby, upon the RC time constant of said resistor R and capacitor C being much greater than the period of said predetermined square wave product signal, said AC output signal comprising substantially only said predetermined square wave product signal is provided at the output of said rotating capacitor square wave filter; and means for synchronously rectifying said AC output signal in phase with and at the frequency fi of said predetermined square wave signal to provide a DC signal which is said indication proportional to the exponentially weighted time average of the product of arbitrary signals A and B with characteristic time T, where T equals the RC time constant of said rotating capacitor C and said electrically associated resistor R.
46. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said additional multiplier means are multiplier means for providing said signal B repetitively reversed in polarity aperiodically.
47. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said additional multiplier means include an electronic multiplier.
48. Apparatus according to claim 47 wherein said electronic multiplier is a switching type phase reversing modulator.
49. Apparatus according to claim 47 wherein said electronic multiplier is a logic multiplier.
50. Apparatus according to claim 49 wherein said logic multiplier is an exclusive-or circuit.
51. Apparatus according to claim 47 wherein said additional multiplier means further include a square wave generator for generating said predetermined square wave signal of frequency fi.
52. Apparatus according to claim 51 wherein said square wave generator is for generating a symmetrical square wave signal.
53. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in series with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a voltage signal and is applied across the series connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
54. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes said resistor R connected in parallel with said capacitor C and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is a current signal and is applied across the parallel connection of said resistor R and said capacitor C.
55. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said rotating capacitor square wave filter includes an operational amplifier connected as an inverting summing amplifier and wherein said capacitor C and resistor R are connected in parallel in the feedback network of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein said output signal of said electronic multiplier is applied to the input of said inverting summing amplifier and wherein substantially only said predetermined square wave product signal appears at the output of said inverting summing amplifier.
56. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said synchronous rectifying means include a square wave signal generator for providing a second predetermined square wave signal in phase with and at the same frequency fi of said predetermined square wave product signal and a switching type phase reversing multiplier for receiving said AC output signal and said second predetermined square wave signal and for multiplying said signals and for providing said DC signal.
57. Apparatus according to claim 45 further including amplifying means connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying said AC output signal.
58. Apparatus according to claim 45 further including a high pass filter connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for further filtering said AC output signal by further removing any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal.
59. Apparatus according to claim 45 further including amplifying means and a high pass filter connected intermediate said synchronous filtering means and said synchronous rectifying means and for amplifying and further filtering said AC output signal to further remove any DC and low frequency signals included in said AC output signal.
60. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said electronic multiplier is a linear multiplier.
61. Apparatus according to claim 45 wherein said electronic multiplier is a switching type phase reversing modulator.
US327145A 1973-01-26 1973-01-26 Signal correlator with improved dynamic range Expired - Lifetime US3867620A (en)

Priority Applications (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US327145A US3867620A (en) 1973-01-26 1973-01-26 Signal correlator with improved dynamic range
DE2402294A DE2402294A1 (en) 1973-01-26 1974-01-18 PROCEDURE AND ARRANGEMENT FOR DISPLAYING THE PRODUCT OF TWO RANDOM SIGNALS
GB351374A GB1463551A (en) 1973-01-26 1974-01-25 Apparatus and process for producing the time average of the product of two arbitrary electric signals
JP49010888A JPS49118343A (en) 1973-01-26 1974-01-25
FR7402579A FR2215656A1 (en) 1973-01-26 1974-01-25

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DE (1) DE2402294A1 (en)
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US4017812A (en) * 1974-08-02 1977-04-12 Commissariat A L'energie Atomique Method of processing a signal, and corresponding devices
US4091453A (en) * 1976-11-10 1978-05-23 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Low offset AC correlator
US4110833A (en) * 1976-11-19 1978-08-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Balanced AC correlator system
US4500973A (en) * 1977-05-16 1985-02-19 Enertec Electronic devices
US4539608A (en) * 1982-12-08 1985-09-03 Storage Technology Corporation Low offset position demodular
US4843334A (en) * 1986-12-09 1989-06-27 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Frequency demodulator operable with low frequency modulation carriers
EP1176540A1 (en) * 2000-07-27 2002-01-30 Infineon Technologies AG Multiplier circuit with offset compensation and quadricorrelator
US6883013B1 (en) * 2000-06-30 2005-04-19 Zoran Corporation Control of low frequency noise floor in upsampling
US20080018278A1 (en) * 2002-11-28 2008-01-24 Nsk Ltd. Motor and drive control device therefor

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS5394750A (en) * 1977-01-28 1978-08-19 Nippon Denki Keiki Kenteisho Error compensation multiplier

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US3774125A (en) * 1972-05-18 1973-11-20 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Band rejection filter using tandem commutating capacitor units

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US3017108A (en) * 1958-06-02 1962-01-16 David C Kalbfell Electronic analog multiplier
US3168645A (en) * 1960-10-06 1965-02-02 Gen Electric Quantized-analogue multiplier
US3036273A (en) * 1960-12-15 1962-05-22 Lockheed Aircraft Corp Full-wave signle-ended synchronous rectifier
US3614407A (en) * 1961-04-06 1971-10-19 Snecma Method of multiplication of electric signals and its application to radar or like systems
US3319172A (en) * 1963-04-17 1967-05-09 Cie D Applic Mecaniques A L El Synchronous detection circuits
US3428794A (en) * 1964-08-17 1969-02-18 Boeing Co Time correlation computers
US3424990A (en) * 1964-12-09 1969-01-28 North American Rockwell Synchronous demodulating means
US3517879A (en) * 1967-01-03 1970-06-30 Sperry Rand Corp Digital signal cross-correlator
US3553723A (en) * 1967-10-26 1971-01-05 Honeywell Inc Signal processor for generating and analyzing spectral information
US3550023A (en) * 1968-04-24 1970-12-22 Webb James E Remodulator filter
US3746851A (en) * 1971-12-21 1973-07-17 Technical Management Services Multiplier, divider and wattmeter using a switching circuit and a pulse-width and frequency modulator
US3774125A (en) * 1972-05-18 1973-11-20 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Band rejection filter using tandem commutating capacitor units

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4017812A (en) * 1974-08-02 1977-04-12 Commissariat A L'energie Atomique Method of processing a signal, and corresponding devices
US4091453A (en) * 1976-11-10 1978-05-23 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Low offset AC correlator
US4110833A (en) * 1976-11-19 1978-08-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Balanced AC correlator system
US4500973A (en) * 1977-05-16 1985-02-19 Enertec Electronic devices
US4539608A (en) * 1982-12-08 1985-09-03 Storage Technology Corporation Low offset position demodular
US4843334A (en) * 1986-12-09 1989-06-27 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Frequency demodulator operable with low frequency modulation carriers
US6883013B1 (en) * 2000-06-30 2005-04-19 Zoran Corporation Control of low frequency noise floor in upsampling
EP1176540A1 (en) * 2000-07-27 2002-01-30 Infineon Technologies AG Multiplier circuit with offset compensation and quadricorrelator
US20020019221A1 (en) * 2000-07-27 2002-02-14 Elmar Wagner Multiplier circuit with offset compensation and quadricorrelator
US6992510B2 (en) 2000-07-27 2006-01-31 Infineon Technologies Ag Multiplier circuit with offset compensation and quadricorrelator
US20080018278A1 (en) * 2002-11-28 2008-01-24 Nsk Ltd. Motor and drive control device therefor

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JPS49118343A (en) 1974-11-12
DE2402294A1 (en) 1974-08-08
FR2215656A1 (en) 1974-08-23
GB1463551A (en) 1977-02-02

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