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			96 lines
		
	
	
		
			5.0 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
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|  __       __   ______      _____  ________      __    __ 
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| |  \  _  |  \ /      \    |     \|        \    |  \  |  \
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| | $$ / \ | $$|  $$$$$$\    \$$$$$ \$$$$$$$$    | $$  | $$
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| | $$/  $\| $$| $$___\$$      | $$   | $$ ______ \$$\/  $$
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| | $$  $$$\ $$ \$$    \  __   | $$   | $$|      \ >$$  $$ 
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| | $$ $$\$$\$$ _\$$$$$$\|  \  | $$   | $$ \$$$$$$/  $$$$\ 
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| | $$$$  \$$$$|  \__| $$| $$__| $$   | $$       |  $$ \$$\
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| | $$$    \$$$ \$$    $$ \$$    $$   | $$       | $$  | $$
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|  \$$      \$$  \$$$$$$   \$$$$$$     \$$        \$$   \$$
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|                                                          
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|                                                          
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|                                                          
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| Copyright (C) 2001 - 2019 by Joe Taylor, K1JT.
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| 
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| WSJT-X Version 2.1 offers ten different protocols or modes: FT4, FT8,
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| JT4, JT9, JT65, QRA64, ISCAT, MSK144, WSPR, and Echo. The first six
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| are designed for making reliable QSOs under weak-signal
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| conditions. They use nearly identical message structure and source
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| encoding. JT65 and QRA64 were designed for EME (“moonbounce”) on the
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| VHF/UHF bands and have also proven very effective for worldwide QRP
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| communication on the HF bands. QRA64 has a number of advantages over
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| JT65, including better performance on the very weakest signals. We
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| imagine that over time it may replace JT65 for EME use. JT9 was
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| originally designed for the LF, MF, and lower HF bands. Its submode
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| JT9A is 2 dB more sensitive than JT65 while using less than 10% of the
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| bandwidth. JT4 offers a wide variety of tone spacings and has proven
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| highly effective for EME on microwave bands up to 24 GHz. These four
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| “slow” modes use one-minute timed sequences of alternating
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| transmission and reception, so a minimal QSO takes four to six minutes
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| — two or three transmissions by each station, one sending in odd UTC
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| minutes and the other even. FT8 is operationally similar but four
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| times faster (15-second T/R sequences) and less sensitive by a few
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| dB. FT4 is faster still (7.5 s T/R sequences) and especially well
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| suited for radio contesting. On the HF bands, world-wide QSOs are
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| possible with any of these modes using power levels of a few watts (or
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| even milliwatts) and compromise antennas. QSOs are possible at signal
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| levels 10 to 15 dB below those required for CW.
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| 
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| Note that even though their T/R sequences are short, FT4 and FT8 are
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| classified as slow modes because their message frames are sent only
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| once per transmission. All fast modes in WSJT-X send their message
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| frames repeatedly, as many times as will fit into the Tx sequence
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| length.
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| 
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| ISCAT, MSK144, and optionally submodes JT9E-H are “fast” protocols
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| designed to take advantage of brief signal enhancements from ionized
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| meteor trails, aircraft scatter, and other types of scatter
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| propagation. These modes use timed sequences of 5, 10, 15, or 30 s
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| duration. User messages are transmitted repeatedly at high rate (up to
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| 250 characters per second, for MSK144) to make good use of the
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| shortest meteor-trail reflections or “pings”. ISCAT uses free-form
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| messages up to 28 characters long, while MSK144 uses the same
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| structured messages as the slow modes and optionally an abbreviated
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| format with hashed callsigns.
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| 
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| WSPR (pronounced “whisper”) stands for Weak Signal Propagation
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| Reporter. The WSPR protocol was designed for probing potential
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| propagation paths using low-power transmissions. WSPR messages
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| normally carry the transmitting station’s callsign, grid locator, and
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| transmitter power in dBm, and they can be decoded at signal-to-noise
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| ratios as low as -31 dB in a 2500 Hz bandwidth. WSPR users with
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| internet access can automatically upload reception reports to a
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| central database called WSPRnet that provides a mapping facility,
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| archival storage, and many other features.
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| 
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| Echo mode allows you to detect and measure your own station’s echoes
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| from the moon, even if they are far below the audible threshold.
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| 
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| WSJT-X provides spectral displays for receiver passbands as wide as 5
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| kHz, flexible rig control for nearly all modern radios used by
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| amateurs, and a wide variety of special aids such as automatic Doppler
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| tracking for EME QSOs and Echo testing. The program runs equally well
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| on Windows, Macintosh, and Linux systems, and installation packages
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| are available for all three platforms.
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| 
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| WSJT-X is an open-source project released under the GPLv3 license (See
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| COPYING). If you have programming or documentation skills or would
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| like to contribute to the project in other ways, please make your
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| interests known to the development team.  The project’s source-code
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| repository can be found at https://sourceforge.net/projects/wsjt, and
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| communication among the developers takes place on the email reflector
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| https://sourceforge.net/p/wsjt/mailman.  User-level questions and
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| answers, and general communication among users is found on the
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| https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/wsjtgroup/info email reflector.
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| 
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| 
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| Project web site:
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| 
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| https://www.physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/K1JT/wsjtx.html
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| 
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| Project mailing list (shared with other applications from the same
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| team):
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| 
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| https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/wsjtgroup
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