Phase Dithering and Modern Error Correction

How Networks Survive Chaos

Understanding Phase Dithering and Modern Error Correction

Transmitter 1 (Static) Transmitter 2 (Dithering) Receiver (Composite Sum)

Phase Dithering

When multiple antennas transmit the exact same signal simultaneously, there is a risk that the waves will collide out-of-phase and permanently cancel each other out (destructive interference).

Phase Dithering is a deliberate, pseudo-random shifting of the waveform back and forth. Watch the orange wave jitter in the animation.

By constantly shifting the phase, the system guarantees that even if signals cancel out for a brief millisecond, they will rapidly shift back into alignment. This creates an artificially fluctuating signal (the bottom wave) called Time Diversity.
Fading Channel
1
0
1
FEC
FEC
Decoder

Modern Error Correction

Because Phase Dithering intentionally causes the signal strength to wildly fluctuate, some bits of data will inevitably be destroyed when the signal dips into destructive interference (the red zone in the animation).

Forward Error Correction (FEC) is the mathematical safety net. Before sending, the transmitter adds redundant “parity” blocks to the data.

When the receiver gets the data, it uses advanced algorithms (like Turbo codes) to analyze the redundant bits. It uses the “good” data that survived to mathematically calculate and rebuild the corrupted/missing data (turning it green) without ever asking the sender to retransmit!

References

[1]

C. to, “Dither: noise that reduces quantization error,” Wikipedia.org, Dec. 05, 2004. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dither (accessed Mar. 29, 2026).

error: