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Red Pitaya (computer)

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Red Pitaya
DeveloperSpin-off company of Instrumentation Technologies
TypeSingle-board computer
Operating systemLinux
CPUDual-core ARM Cortex A9+ and FPGA
MemoryDDR3 RAM 512 MB (4 Gb)
StoragemicroSD up to 32Gb
Powermax 10 W
Websitewww.redpitaya.com

Red Pitaya is a project intended to be an alternative for many expensive laboratory measurement and control instruments. It is known as open-source, though the hardware design is proprietary.

Description

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It has two 125 MS/s RF input and two 125 MS/s RF outputs, with 50 MHz analogue bandwidth and 14-bit analog-to-digital (ADC) and digital-to-analog converters. The software includes oscilloscope, spectrum analyzer, signal generator, LCR meter (the LCR add-on costs an additional 400 euros), and 50 MHz 2x2 MIMO PID controller. It can be re-programmed to become other devices, as all the IO ports are connected to a common field-programmable gate array (FPGA). There are also auxiliary ADC (250 kS/s) and digital IO.[1][2]

It has three USB 2.0 ports, Wi-Fi, Ethernet connector. Internally, it uses Linux as an operating system. The mass storage device for the operating system is a micro-SD card.

Due to the wide bandwidth of the ADC and DAC, the Red Pitaya can be used as a software-defined radio receiver and transmitter and in other radio frequency applications.[3] HAMLAB, a fully featured SDR HF transceiver with an output power of 10 W based on the Red Pitaya board is released in the amateur radio market in October 2016.[4]

Although the software (including HDL source code) for this project is made freely available, the device is not a fully Open Source Hardware project, because the device's electrical schematics are not made openly available.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Ibrahim, Dogan (2016). Explore, experiment, program Red Pitaya for test & measurement. London, UK: Elektor International Media BV. ISBN 978-1-907920-53-0.
  2. ^ Richards, Mike (July 2016). "Pi Updates and Red Pitaya". Radio User. 11 (7). Bournemouth, UK: PW Publishing Ltd: 17. ISSN 1748-8117.
  3. ^ Richards, Mike (August 2016). "Red Pitaya as a VNA (vector network analyser)". Radio User. 11 (8). Bournemouth, UK: PW Publishing Ltd: 18–21. ISSN 1748-8117.
  4. ^ HAMLAB web page
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