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AAH Cage Out-Link and In-Link Antenna CharacterizationThis final report encapsulates the accomplishments of the third year of work on an Advanced Biotelemetry System (ABTS). Overall MU/ABTS project objectives are to provide a biotelemetry system that can collect data from and send commands to an implanted biotransceiver. This system will provide for studies of rodent development in space. The system must be capable of operating in a metal animal cage environment. An important goal is the development of a small, "smart", micropower, implantable biotransceiver with eight-channel data output and single channel command input capabilities with the flexibility for easy customization for a variety of physiologic investigations. The NASA Ames/Marquette University Joint Research work has been devoted to the system design of such a new state of the art biotelemetry system, having multiple physiologic inputs, and bi-directional data transfer capabilities. This work has provided a successful prototype system that connects, by two-way radio links, an addressable biotelemetry system that provides communication between an animal biotelemeter prototype and a personal computer. The operational features of the prototype system are: (1) two-way PCM communication with implanted biotelemeter; (2) microcontroller based biotelemeter; (3) out-link: wideband FSK (60 kBaud); (4) in-link: OOK (2.4 kbaud); (5) septum antenna arrays (In/Out-Links); and (6) personal computer data interface. The important requirement of this third year's work, to demonstrate two-way communication with transmit and receive antennas inside the metal animal cage, has been successfully accomplished. The advances discussed in this report demonstrate that the AAH cage antenna system can provide Out-link and In-link capability for the ABTS bi-directional telemetry system, and can serve as a benchmark for project status. Additions and enhancements to the most recent (April 1997) prototype cage and antenna have been implemented. The implementation, testing, and documentation was accomplished at the Biotelemetry Laboratory at Marquette University with Out-Link (slot) antenna design assistance was provided.
Document ID
19990008763
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Contractor or Grantee Report
Authors
Jeutter, Dean C.
(Marquette Univ. Milwaukee, WI United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1998
Subject Category
Communications And Radar
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NCC2-5228
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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