update
My friend cryptomaster (thanks) confirmed the user (CIS networks) and he also pointed out that the 128-bit sequence is actually a 64-bit sequence that is transmitted in opposite polarity:
1111101111001110101100001011100011011010010001001100101010000001
0000010000110001010011110100011100100101101110110011010101111110
As well as the central part of the message which is the same 64-bit sequence (here 13-bit shifted) but with one bit in error:
0010101000000111110111100111010110000101110001101101001000100110
1101010111111000001000011000101001111010001110010010110111011000
11 June 2020
Unid (likely CIS) 50Bd/500 FSK message recorded on 12221 KHz (cf) at 1035z using the KiwiSDR "nsk" located near Novosibirsk, Russia. Notice the sequences generated by the polynomials x^7 + x^5 +x + 1 (128 bytes length) and x^5 + x^4 + x + 1 (Fig. 1).Fig. 1 - the two LFSR sequences |
Fig. 2 - phases of the two FSK tones |
No comments:
Post a Comment