This book provides a comprehensive resource and thorough treatment of the latest development of digital RF memory (DRFM) technology and its key role in maintaining dominance over the electromagnetic spectrum. Part I discusses the use of advanced technology to design transceivers for spectrum sensing using unmanned systems. Part II explains how artificial intelligence and machine learning enable modern spectrum sensing and detection signal processing for electronic support and electronic attack. Counter-DRFM techniques are also examined. DRFM and transceiver design details and examples are provided along with MATLAB® software, allowing readers to construct their own embedded DRFM transceivers for unmanned systems.
Pace Phillip E. Pace is a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California, where he serves as Chairman of the N433 Threat Simulator Validation Working Group and Director of the NPS Center for Joint Services Electronic Warfare. He is also the author of Advanced Techniques for Digital Receivers (Artech House, 2000) and he has published numerous papers on topics involving high speed signal processing in electronics and warfare applications. Dr. Pace received his Ph.D. from the University of Cincinnati.