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SN CN EbNo

This document discusses various signal quality ratios used to measure the performance of communication systems, including: 1) Signal-to-noise ratio (S/N), carrier-to-noise ratio (C/N), and carrier-to-noise density ratio (C/No) which measure the strength of the signal relative to noise. 2) Energy per bit to noise density ratio (Eb/No) which allows comparing the performance of different modulation schemes. 3) How forward error correction adds redundant data to improve reliability, and how bit error rate (BER) plots against these ratios are used to analyze system performance.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
120 views36 pages

SN CN EbNo

This document discusses various signal quality ratios used to measure the performance of communication systems, including: 1) Signal-to-noise ratio (S/N), carrier-to-noise ratio (C/N), and carrier-to-noise density ratio (C/No) which measure the strength of the signal relative to noise. 2) Energy per bit to noise density ratio (Eb/No) which allows comparing the performance of different modulation schemes. 3) How forward error correction adds redundant data to improve reliability, and how bit error rate (BER) plots against these ratios are used to analyze system performance.

Uploaded by

aidenpark
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 36

Signal-to-Noise, Carrier-to-Noise, EbNo

on Signal Quality Ratios

by Wolfgang Damm, WTG


Agenda

Signal Measurement Environment

Ratios: S/N, C/N, C/No, C/I, EbNo

Shannon Limit

Error Correction

BER & Coding Schemes

Noisecom CNG-EbNo

Questions - Answers
Technologies effected by Power Measurements

Satellite Communication R&D, System Monitoring

Cable TV R&D, bandwidth analysis, throughput


optimization, amplifiers,

Telecommunications R&D, QoS, amplifiers,

Chip Manufacturing Amplifiers, Receivers, Transmitters

Wireless Data Networks R&D, System Monitoring,


Backbone & Directed RF Optimization, Monitoring
links

mmWave applications e.g. 60G


Signal Quality: Essential for Data Transmission

Data transmission has to work under challenging


circumstances: weak signals and high noise levels

Requirement: High data rates, reliability, low BER

Designers, developers and system engineers have to take less-


than-ideal circumstances in consideration.
Signal Environment
Signal Measurement Environment 1

P
Signal
High
Signal
Power

f
Signal Measurement Environment 2

P
Signal

Signal
Power
Limitations

f
Signal Measurement Environment 3

Signal

Lower power
level due to
spread spectrum

f
Signal Measurement Environment 4

Intrinsic noise
P (amplifier, demodulator) Signal

Noise
Floor

f
Signal Measurement Environment 5

Intrinsic noise
P (amplifier, demodulator) Signal

Neighbor
channels

Noise
Floor

f
Communication Challenges

Satellite
Communication
10101000101110001

Wireless Data

10101000101110001 Limited Power


Limited Bandwidth
Very low Signal Levels
Noise
Interferers
Cable TV Limited Data Processing Power
Shannon Limit

ShannonHartley theorem:
The limit of reliable data rate of a channel depends on band-
width and signal-to-noise ratio according to:

Signal
power (S)
R information rate in bits per second;
B channel bandwidth in Hertz;
Noise
power (N) S total signal power (equivalent to the
carrier power C)
N total noise power in the bandwidth.
Bandwidth (B)
f
Forward Error Correction (FEC)

FEC is a system of error control for data transmission. The sender


adds redundant data to its messages (error correction code).

Example (2 Bit overhead):

Triplet Interpreted Advantages:


received as
High degree of fault tolerance
000 0

001 0
No back-channel required
010 0
Simple logic (cost efficient, fast)
100 0

111 1 Disadvantages:
110 1 Adds data redundancy to link budget
101 1

011 1
Ratios

C/N Carrier to noise


C/No Carrier to noise density
Eb/No Energy per bit to noise density
C/I Carrier to interferer
Carrier to Noise Ratio (C/N)

What is it? P

C/N is the ratio of the relative


power level to the noise level in
the bandwidth of a system. Carrier
power (C)

Why: Noise

Allows to analyze if a carrier


power (N)

can still be recognized as such,


or if it is obliterated by ambient
and system noise. C/N Provides Bandwidth (B)
f
a value for the quality of a
communication channel. C and N may be measured in watts or in volts squared

How:
The quality of the system is A Carrier is modulated and measured at the input of the demodulator

usually determined through A Signal is demodulated and usually measured at the output of the
demodulator
BER plots against C/N.
C/N Example
-15.0

-20.0

-25.0

-30.0

-35.0

-40.0

-45.0

-50.0

dBm

Example: Spectrum of a QPSK signal interfered by ambient white noise. The


horizontal axis shows the frequency in Hertz, and the vertical axis the power in dBm
In this example, the C/N is (32.5 dBm) (48 dBm) = 15.5
Noise Spectral Density (No)

What is No? P

Noise spectral density (No) is defined


as the amount of (white) noise energy
per bandwidth unit (Hz).

No = N / B Noise
power (N)

No is often expressed as:


1Hz
Bandwidth (B) f
No = k T
where Units of No are:
k is the Boltzmann's constant in Joules [J], Watts/Hz [W/Hz] or Watts * s [Ws].
Joules per Kelvin [J/K], and All three units express the very same metric..
T is the receiver system noise
temperature in Kelvin [K] [J] = [W / Hz] = [Ws]
Carrier to Noise Spectral Density Ratio (C/No)

What is it? P

C/No is the ratio of the power


level to the noise power spectral
density (normalized noise level
Carrier
power (C)
relative to 1 Hz) in a system.
Noise
Why: power (N)

Similar as C/N but C/No does not


factor the actual noise bandwidth 1Hz
in. This simplifies analysis of Bandwidth (B) f
systems where variation of the
(utilized) BW may apply.

How:
As C/N, C/No is usually
determined through BER plots.
Energy per Bit (Eb)

What is Eb? P

Energy per information bit (i.e. the


energy per bit net of FEC overhead Carrier
10101000101
bits). Carrier power divided by actual power (C)
information bits.

Eb = C / R
where
C is the carrier power, and f

R is the actual information bit rate. Simplified depiction of Eb. Bits in modulation schemes are
not as shown directly linked to a certain frequency.

Why?
Using the Eb rather than overall carrier Unit of Eb is:
power (C) allows comparing different Joules [J], Watts/Hz [W/Hz] or Watts * s [Ws].
modulation schemes easily. All three units express the very same metric..
Energy per Bit to Noise Spectrum Density (Eb/No)

What is it? P

Eb/No is the ratio of the Energy


per Bit divided by the noise
power density. Carrier
power (C)
10101000101

Why: Noise

Allows comparing bit error rate


power (N)

(BER) performance (effective-


ness) of different digital modu- 1Hz
lation schemes. Both factors are Bandwidth (B)
f
normalized, so actual bandwidth
is no longer of concern.

How:
Modulation schemes are com- Eb / No is a dimensionless ratio.
pared through BER plots against
Eb/No.
BER, Coding Scheme and Eb/No

Coding
improvement
Eb/No

Eb / No is commonly used with


modulation and coding design
for noise-limited rather than
interference-limited communi-
cation systems, and for power-
limited rather than bandwidth-
limited communication
systems. Examples of power-
limited systems include spread
spectrum and deep-space,
which are optimized by using
large bandwidths relative to the
bit rate. MSK: Minimum shift keying
PSK: Phase shift keying
DBPSK: Differential binary phase shift keying
DQPSK: Differential quadrature phase shift keying
OOK: On-off-keying
OFSK: Orthogonal frequency shift keying
Analyzing Ratios (EbNo)

Carrier Receiver

Tuning carrier or
noise level shifts Eb/No

Noise
Source
CNG EbNo

Transmitter Receiver

Noise
Source

CNG Eb/No does exactly this, it


automatically sets the desired Eb/No
quickly and very accurately. Based on
the user-specified carrier output level,
Eb/No ratio, and bit rate, the instrument
calculates for example the maximum
noise density.
Correlation: C/N, C/No and Eb/No

C/N, C/No and Eb/No are correlated

C / N = C / (No * B) = (Eb / No) * (R / B) R information rate in bits per second;


B channel bandwidth in Hertz;
C total carrier power
Eb / No = (C / N) * (B / R) N total noise power in the bandwidth.

No = (N * Eb *R) / B * C

C / N dB = 10 log (Eb/No) + 10 log (R / B)


Carrier to Interference Ratio (C/I, CIR)

What is it? P
C/I is the quotient between the
average received modulated carrier
power C and the average received Carrier
power (C)
co-channel interference power I
( i.e. cross-talk, from other
transmitters than the useful
signal).

Why: Channel Channel


Allows analysis and rating of Interference 1 Interference 2

channel channel robustness against


neighbor channels. C / I = C / (I1 + I2 + In)

How:
As C/N and C/No, C/I is usually C / I is a dimensionless ratio
analyzed through BER plots.
CNG EbNo Application

The CNG EbNo, simulates the transmitter-receiver link and


measures relevant transmission quality parameters at the same
time.
Product Specification Examples
CNG EbNo Specs (excerpt)

Carrier Path Noise Path


Input Power -55 dBm to +5 dBm Output Power -55 dBm to +5 dBm
Range: Range:
Max Input +21 dBm (with no damage) Flatness: +/- 0.2 dB / 40 MHz
Power: +/- 0.3 dB / 80 MHz
Nominal +/-1.0 dB +/- 0.4 dB / 200 MHz
gain: +/- 0.5 dB / 300 MHz

Gain 0 to 60 dB in 0.1 dB steps Attenuation 60 dB in 0.25 dB steps


resolution: range: (0.1 dB opt)

Gain 0.2 dB for 70 MHz +/-20 MHz


flatness: 0.3 dB for 140 MHz +/-40 MHz
0.4 dB for others
Group +/-.20 ns/40 MHz for
Delay: frequencies above 20 MHz

CNG EbNos are available with a wide variety of frequency bands. Please check:
http://noisecom.com/products/instruments/cng-ebno-snr-noise-generator for more information
or contact your next Noisecom representative.
CNG EbNo vs. Spectrum Analyzer

The CNG EbNo offers a variety of advantages over discrete instruments


when measuring C/N, C/No, Eb/No or C/I:

Automated procedure, therefore repeatable measurements provided


quickly
Highest accuracy through substitution calibration method
Automated calculation of results
Customer specific configuration depending on the application
Conclusion

Signal Measurement Environment

Ratios: C/N, C/No, C/I, EbNo

Shannon Limit

Error Correction

BER & Coding Schemes

Noisecom CNG-EbNo
Questions Answers
CNG EbNo Block Diagram (simplified)

OUT

+
AWGN

Sig

dB

Controller Power
Meter
Questions Answers
THANK YOU !

Join us for our next Webinar:


Amplifier Testing: New Methods (Part I)
by Bob Muro, WTG
Date: 12/15/2010
Addendum

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