PatentBrief

Measuring Distance to a Radio Emitter from a Moving Vehicle

This patent describes a system for a single moving vehicle to passively determine the distance to a radio signal source by comparing the timing and phase changes of signals received by two spaced antennas.

Granted 1974activeExpired 1992Owned by US Department of NavyInvented by L Smith, K Sayano

Original patent title: “Passive ranging technique

What this patent covers

The actual claim

The patent describes a system to measure the distance (range) to a radio signal source without sending out its own signal. It uses at least two antennas on a single vehicle (Claim 1). A receiver processes the signals, sending video signals to a "time of arrival computing means" to determine the direction (bearing) to the source. Simultaneously, intermediate frequency (IF) or radio frequency (RF) signals go to a "phase rate computer means" (Claim 1). This phase computer measures how quickly the phase difference between the two antennas changes over time, producing a "phase rate beat frequency voltage" (Claim 1). A "modifying means" adjusts the bearing signal based on factors like antenna spacing, drift angle, and ground speed (Claim 4). Finally, a "combining means" uses this adjusted bearing signal and the phase rate information to calculate and output the range to the radio source (Claim 1). For example, a military aircraft could use this to locate an enemy radar without revealing its own position.

What this patent does NOT cover

The boundaries

  • Does not cover systems that actively transmit a signal to determine range, such as traditional radar.
  • Does not cover range determination using only one antenna, as it requires at least two physically separated antennas (Claim 1).
  • Does not cover systems that determine range solely based on time of arrival without also using phase rate information (Claim 1).
  • Does not cover systems that do not account for vehicle movement parameters like drift angle or ground speed when modifying the bearing signal (Claim 4).
  • Does not cover range finding where the antennas are not physically separated, as physical separation is a core requirement (Claim 1).

These exclusions are unique to PatentBrief — derived from the actual claim language, not patent-office boilerplate.

What made this novel

The novelty lies in combining both the difference in signal arrival times (for bearing) and the rate of change of the phase difference (for range) between two antennas on a single, moving platform. This allows for a complete range solution from a single vehicle, which was a significant challenge for passive systems.

Passive ranging technique(Primary claim)telecommunicationsaerospacedefensesoftwareelectronics

Schematic visualization of the patent's claim structure. Hand-drawn diagrams in progress for each landmark patent.

Where you've seen this

Real-world examples

01

Electronic warfare support measures (ESM) systems on military aircraft

02

Radar warning receivers (RWR)

03

Intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) platforms

04

Radio direction finding (RDF) systems with ranging capabilities

Why it matters

The bigger picture

This patent, assigned to the US Department of Navy, describes a method for a single vehicle to determine the range to an emitter without radiating its own signals. This capability is crucial for military applications, allowing a tactical vehicle to locate enemy radar or communication systems while remaining undetected. Such passive ranging techniques enhance situational awareness and survivability in hostile environments.

Filed

January 7, 1972

Granted

January 29, 1974

Claim 1 — Plain English

What this patent covers

The patent describes a system to measure the distance (range) to a radio signal source without sending out its own signal. It uses at least two antennas on a single vehicle (Claim 1). A receiver processes the signals, sending video signals to a "time of arrival computing means" to determine the direction (bearing) to the source. Simultaneously, intermediate frequency (IF) or radio frequency (RF) signals go to a "phase rate computer means" (Claim 1). This phase computer measures how quickly the phase difference between the two antennas changes over time, producing a "phase rate beat frequency voltage" (Claim 1). A "modifying means" adjusts the bearing signal based on factors like antenna spacing, drift angle, and ground speed (Claim 4). Finally, a "combining means" uses this adjusted bearing signal and the phase rate information to calculate and output the range to the radio source (Claim 1). For example, a military aircraft could use this to locate an enemy radar without revealing its own position.

The clever bit

The novelty lies in combining both the difference in signal arrival times (for bearing) and the rate of change of the phase difference (for range) between two antennas on a single, moving platform. This allows for a complete range solution from a single vehicle, which was a significant challenge for passive systems.

What it does not cover

  • Does not cover systems that actively transmit a signal to determine range, such as traditional radar.
  • Does not cover range determination using only one antenna, as it requires at least two physically separated antennas (Claim 1).
  • Does not cover systems that determine range solely based on time of arrival without also using phase rate information (Claim 1).
  • Does not cover systems that do not account for vehicle movement parameters like drift angle or ground speed when modifying the bearing signal (Claim 4).
  • Does not cover range finding where the antennas are not physically separated, as physical separation is a core requirement (Claim 1).

Patent Journey

From filing to expiry

Patent Filed

1972

Patent Granted

1974 · 2yr after filing

Patent Expired

1992

PatentBrief Score

Impact Score

29/ 100

Early stage

Citation count

25/40

Moderately cited

Claim breadth

4/20

Moderate scope

Recency

0/20

Older than 20 years

Assignee scale

0/20

Independent or smaller assignee

PatentBrief Impact Score — based on citation count, claim breadth, recency, and assignee scale. Not a legal assessment.

The original legal language

Original claims

6 claims as filed with the patent office.

Citations

Patent lineage

Cites earlier patents

2

earlier patents this invention cites as foundations

View prior art →

Cited by later patents

16

later patents that build on this invention

View patents →

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Last reviewed: May 25, 2026 · PatentBrief is not a law firm and this is not legal advice.