Hi, this page seems very helpful: http://rfmw.em.keysight.com/wireless/helpfiles/89600b/webhelp/subsystems/wlan-ofdm/Content/ofdm_basicprinciplesoverview.htm
The basic idea is you can add as many sinusoid signals of different frequencies into one signal as you want, before transmission. It looks like in DSP applications, this is done with an inverse fast fourier transform operation, where you start off with all the frequency/amplitude information you want to send, and mathematically transform that into a time domain signal. You add guard bands arounds this "OFDM symbol" and transmit it. Then on receive end you do the (non-inverse) FFT transform to get the info back from the different frequencies. So, really you are only generating one signal, but multiplexed with all the subcarrier information. -- Christopher Howard p: +1 (907) 374-0257 w: https://librehacker.com social: https://gnusocial.club/librehacker gpg: ADDEAADE5D607C8D (keys.gnupg.net) On Tue, 2020-04-07 at 03:20 +0200, Juan Antonio wrote: > I've been wanting to understand how an ofdm signal is generated for a > while and I can't > > The hackrf generates similar signals but I also do not understand how > it generates them. It seems impossible to generate 8000 carriers at > the same time, therefore the only thing left is to generate them > sequentially(to sample), generating a point and passing to the next > frequency , thus until 8K and then go back to the beginning and go > the same way.The trick would be to do it so fast that it is not > noticeable to say it in any way > > Thank you > _______________________________________________ > HackRF-dev mailing list > HackRF-dev@greatscottgadgets.com > https://pairlist9.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/hackrf-dev _______________________________________________ HackRF-dev mailing list HackRF-dev@greatscottgadgets.com https://pairlist9.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/hackrf-dev