The four types of jamming are noise jamming, spot jamming, barrage jamming, and deceptive jamming. Noise jamming involves overwhelming the radar or communications system with random noise to mask the legitimate signal. Spot jamming targets a specific frequency or signal, interfering with communications on that particular channel. Barrier jamming spreads the interference across a wide range of frequencies, affecting multiple channels simultaneously. Deceptive jamming manipulates the received signal to mislead or confuse the receiver without necessarily blocking the signal.
Jamming refers to the deliberate interference with electronic communications or radar systems to disrupt their functionality. It involves generating signals that obscure, modify, or otherwise affect the intended signals, rendering them ineffective. Types of jamming include noise jamming, which floods the target frequency with random noise; Point blocking, which targets specific frequencies; and deceptive jamming, which injects false information to mislead the receiver.
The type of jammer used depends on the intended target and objective. For example, noise fogs are used to create interference across a broad spectrum, while point jammers are used for precise attacks on specific frequencies. Deceptive fogs are used to induce or falsify the data received by the target system. Each type of jammer has specific applications and effectiveness depending on the nature of the targeted communications or radar system.
Different types of wireless jamming include narrowband jamming, which targets specific frequency bands; Wideband jamming, which covers a wide range of frequencies; and pulsed jamming, which intermittently disrupts communications. Additionally, there are techniques such as frequency hopping jamming, which disrupts systems that use rapid frequency changes, and spoofing, which sends false signals to fool the target system.
Different types of mobile jamming techniques include GSM jamming, which targets specific frequencies used by GSM networks; CDMA Jamming, which affects CDMA-based communication; and GPS jamming, which interferes with signals used for GPS navigation. These techniques are designed to disrupt mobile communications or navigation systems by overwriting signals or causing false readings.