


Radar Jamming
Later, defense-industry scientists discovered that MESA was a crucial tool for
electronic countermeasures, and they gave it its first real-time application.
Radar jamming is a vital weapon in modern air warfareif a warplane can detect and analyze the radar signals of another aircraft, a
missile, or a ground installation, then it can defend itself by emitting
signals that confuse or deceive the enemys listening radar receivers.
Initially, the challenge was to quickly tune in to the fixed frequencies of
older radars, and then start jamming on those frequencies. However, as radars
became more sophisticated and made increasing use of powerful computers, they
became harder to tune in on: irregular noise was superimposed on the radar
signals to cloak them, the signals were broken up into bursts too short for older
jammers to analyze, and the frequencies used were varied rapidly and constantly,
making it difficult for would-be jammers to detect a signal at all.
Radar scientists recognized that MESA techniques could solve these problems.
MESA
s ability to filter out cyclical activity from background noise handled the
cloaking transmissions; and its ability to find cyclical signals based on a very
short data samples meant that it could both detect short bursts of radar, and
cope with rapidly changing frequencies. So MESAs methods were coupled with full-spectrum scanning and jamming transmitters to
quickly lock in on and jam even the trickiest, most quickly varying radar
signals.
The same features that led to MESA
s use in oil exploration and radar jamming, developed through the efforts of
mathematicians, geophysicists, and radar scientists, are the ones that equip
MESA so well to quickly filter cyclic components from incoming market price data,
and respond with a potentially profitable prediction.
John Ehlers served in the U. S. Air Force in electronic countermeasures during
the Korean War, which led him to obtain his bachelor
s, masters and doctorate degrees in the field of communication engineering and
information theory. His continuing work in radar jamming research introduced him to
MESA, and thanks to his curiosity and interest in trading, led to the application
of MESA techniques to market analysis and to MESA Studies on Aspen Systems.
Topics:
MESA and Oil Exploration
MESA and Fourier Analysis
MESA and Market Analysis
Using MESA, by John Ehlers
Applying MESA Studies