Chapter 5: Noise: 5.1 Noise - Representation, Types and Sources
Chapter 5: Noise: 5.1 Noise - Representation, Types and Sources
Chapter 5: Noise
Electrical noise is defined as any undesirable electrical energy that falls within the
passband of the signal.
Figure 5.1 shows the effect that noise has on the electrical signal:
Figure 5.1: Effects of noise on a signal: (a) without noise; (b) with noise
Noise can be divided into two general categories: correlated and uncorrelated.
Correlation implies a relationship between the signal and the noise. Therefore, correlated
noise exists only when a signal is present. Uncorrelated noise is present all the time
whether there is a signal or not
Uncorrelated noise can be further subdivided into two general categories: external and
internal
a. Atmospheric noise
b. Extraterrestrial noise
• Consists of electrical signals that originate from outside Earth’s atmosphere and
therefore also known as deep-space noise
• Subdivided into two categories
c. Man-made noise
a. Shot noise
• Caused by the random arrival of carriers (holes and electrons) at the output
element of an electronic device
• Shot noise is randomly varying and is superimposed onto any signal present
b. Transit-time noise
c. Thermal/random noise
• Associated with the rapid and random movement of electrons within a conductor
due to thermal agitation
• Also known as Brownian noise, Johnson noise and white noise
• Uniformly distributed across the entire electromagnetic spectrum
• A form of additive noise, meaning that it cannot be eliminated, and it increases in
intensity with the number of devices and with circuit length
• The most significant of all noise sources
• Thermal noise power
N = KTB (5.1)
Note: T = 0 C + 273 0
The following figure shows the equivalent circuit for a thermal noise source when the
internal resistance of the source R I is in series with the rms noise voltage VN
For worst-case condition and maximum transfer of noise power, the load resistance R is
made equal to internal resistance. Thus the noise power developed across the load
resistor:
(VN / 2) 2 VN2
N = KTB = =
R 4R
Correlated noise is a form of internal noise that is correlated to the signal and cannot be
present in a circuit unless there is a signal. It is produced by nonlinear amplification
resulting in nonlinear distortion. There are two types of nonlinear distortion that create
unwanted frequencies that interfere with the signal and degrade performance:
a. Harmonic distortion
v higher
% THD = 100 (5.3)
v fundamental
Notes: vhigher = v22 + v32 + v42 + ..... + vn2 and all in rms values
b. Intermodulation distortion
Figure 5.3: Correlated noise: (a) Harmonic distortion; (b) Intermodulation distortion
a. Impulse noise
b. Interference
• Electrical interference occurs when information signals from one source produce
frequencies that fall outside their allocated bandwidth and interfere with
information signals from another source
• Most occurs in the radio-frequency spectrum