EME (communications)

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Earth-Moon-Earth, also known as moon bounce, is a radio communications technique which relies on the propagation of radio waves from an earth-based transmitter directed via reflection from the surface of the moon back to an earth-based receiver.

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The use of the moon as a passive communications satellite were proposed by Mr W. Bray of the British General Post Office in 1940. It was calculated that with the available microwave transmission powers and low noise receivers, it would be possible to beam microwave signals up from earth and reflect off the moon. It was thought that at least one voice channel would be possible. [1]

The "moon bounce" technique was developed by the United States Military in the years after World War II, with the first successful reception of echoes off the moon being carried out at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey on January 10, 1946 by John H. DeWitt as part of Project Diana. This was followed by more practical uses, including a teletype link between the naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii and United States Navy headquarters in Washington, DC. In the days before communications satellites, a link free of the vagaries of ionospheric propagation was revolutionary.

Later, the technique was used by non-military commercial users, and the first amateur detection of signals from the moon took place in 1953.

As the albedo of the moon is very low (around 12%), and the path loss over the 770,000 kilometre return distance is extreme (around 250 dB depending on VHF-UHF band used), high power (more than 100 watts) and high-gain antennas (more than 35 dB) must be used. In practice, this limits the use of this technique to the spectrum at VHF and above.

Recent advances in digital signal processing have allowed EME contacts, admittedly with low data rate, to take place with powers in the order of 100 Watts and a single Yagi antenna.

VHF

UHF

  • CW
  • WSJT
  • SSB
  • Narrow FM
  • Narrow FM (15 kHz to 5 kHz)
  • MT63 using SSB or AM

Microwave

EME also stands for 'Electromagnetic Emissions'.

  1. ^ Pether, John (1998). The Post Office at War. Bletchley Park Trust, 25. 

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