> WHERE_RANDOMNESS_COMES_FROM
How random material is formed inside the nodes
Each node acts as an independent measurement chain: antenna, SDR receiver, ADC, and subsequent digital processing. What matters is not the payload of radio transmissions, but the fragment of the received spectrum in which physical noise and background instability can be measured.
Samples therefore contain a mixture of phenomena present within the selected band and channel width: galactic emission, cosmic microwave background, atmospheric noise, thermal noise of analog components, receiver front-end limitations, ADC quantization, and local antenna and installation conditions.
Random material does not come from one ideal source, but from the overlap of many small physical processes measured by independent nodes in different locations. Only later is this material filtered, sampled, and mixed cryptographically.