Anritsu debuts MS27101A remote spectrum monitor

Jan. 19, 2016

Morgan Hill, CA. The MS27101A remote spectrum monitor is the most recent edition to Anritsu’s line of interference-detecting tools. MS27101A can be used with Anritsu’s Vision software to create a highly accurate remote solution for government regulators and university lab researchers to identify interference patterns, record spectrum history, and geo-locate the sources of problem signals to mitigate interference issues and identify illegal or unlicensed signal activity.

The MS27101A addresses the market need for an accurate remote solution for white-space monitoring, harm-claim threshold detection, in-building interference monitoring, positive train-control-system protection, and locating illegal/unlicensed signal sources or similar interference. Housed in a half-rack enclosure, the MS27101A is suitable for spectrum monitoring where a small footprint is required.

The MS27101A is capable of sweeping at rates up to 24 GHz/s, allowing capture of intermittent signals, including periodic or transient transmissions as well as short bursty signals. High dynamic range of >106 dB normalized to 1 Hz BW, 20-MHz instantaneous bandwidth, high sensitivity, and low spurious signals allow the MS27101A to reliably monitor low-level signals. Power consumption is typically less than 11 W, which allows the MS27101A to be powered by solar cells in remote locations.

When used with the optional Vision software, the MS27101A can record spectrum history and geo-locate the signal of interest. Three or more MS27101A monitors are needed to approximate the position of the interfering signal. Vision software provides complete command and control of all spectrum monitoring probes deployed in the field. The software operates on Windows-based PCs/servers, communicating with the MS27101A via Gigabit Ethernet or a USB cellular modem.

Similar to the other remote spectrum monitors available from Anritsu, the MS27101A is designed for robust field deployments, with capabilities for remote power cycling, automated system recovery protocols, and secure firmware updates pushed to the monitor remotely. In the event of an application error or power fluctuation that causes an interruption in monitor communication, a re-boot policy is implemented to reset the remote probe to its previous state.

An integrated web server is embedded into the MS27101A that allows the remote spectrum monitor to be accessed by users anywhere in the world via an Internet browser. After logging in, full control is possible. Simultaneously, trace data, spectrograms and other measurements can be viewed inside the browser window.

Anritsu’s remote spectrum monitor family also includes the MS27102A and MS27103A. The MS27102A is an IP67-rated full-featured platform designed for outdoor applications. Capable of sweep rates up to 24 GHz/s, the probe allows many signal types to be captured. The MS27103A is specifically designed to identify and locate interfering signals, so cellular companies, DAS operators, and operators of land mobile networks can act quickly to protect their multi-billion dollar network investment and maintain data capacity.

www.anritsu.com

About the Author

Rick Nelson | Contributing Editor

Rick is currently Contributing Technical Editor. He was Executive Editor for EE in 2011-2018. Previously he served on several publications, including EDN and Vision Systems Design, and has received awards for signed editorials from the American Society of Business Publication Editors. He began as a design engineer at General Electric and Litton Industries and earned a BSEE degree from Penn State.

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