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Communications Systems

This document provides an overview of analog communication systems and amplitude modulation (AM). It discusses why modulation is needed to transmit baseband signals over communication channels and defines modulation as varying a carrier signal based on a modulating wave. It then describes AM in detail, including how it works in both the time and frequency domains. It also outlines two key requirements for AM: 1) the carrier frequency must be much greater than the signal bandwidth, and 2) over-modulation should be avoided to prevent envelope distortion. Finally, it notes some limitations of AM and improvements that can be made using other modulation techniques.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
40 views

Communications Systems

This document provides an overview of analog communication systems and amplitude modulation (AM). It discusses why modulation is needed to transmit baseband signals over communication channels and defines modulation as varying a carrier signal based on a modulating wave. It then describes AM in detail, including how it works in both the time and frequency domains. It also outlines two key requirements for AM: 1) the carrier frequency must be much greater than the signal bandwidth, and 2) over-modulation should be avoided to prevent envelope distortion. Finally, it notes some limitations of AM and improvements that can be made using other modulation techniques.

Uploaded by

lexus nmm
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 18

Week 1

ELEC 4402 Communication Systems

Analog Communications
Dr Defeng (David) Huang

These lecture notes were compiled and edited from multiple resources.

1
Why Modulation?
Baseband is the band of frequencies representing
the original signal.

The utilization of communication channel requires


a shift of the range of baseband frequencies into
other frequency ranges suitable for transmission,
and a corresponding shift back to the original
frequency range after reception.

This shift is accomplished by using


modulation/demodulation.
2
Baseband Signal
Sources of Information

Speech – a band from 300 Hz to 3400


Hz
Music – a wider band of frequencies
up to 15 kHz

Moving Pictures – a bandwidth of ~4.2 MHz.

Computer Data – transmission in bursts

3
What is Modulation?
 Modulation is defined as the process by which some
characteristic of a carrier is varied in accordance with a
modulating wave
 Modulation is performed at the transmitter
 After receiving a signal,the original baseband signal is
restored by using demodulation.
 Demodulation is the way to restore the original baseband
signal

4
Carrier Signal: sinusoidal wave
The sinusoidal wave is parameterized by
constant amplitude, frequency and phase:

x(t )  A cos2ft   

5
Table of Modulation Methods
AM/FM/PM: amplitude/frequency/phase modulation
ASK/FSK/PSK: amplitude/frequency/phase shift-keying

Modulating Modulation performed


Signal on

Analog modulation AM FM PM
methods
s(t )  A sin(2 ft   )

Digital modulation
methods ASK FSK PSK
6
Continuous-wave Modulation
Ac cos(2 f c t )
Carrier wave

A modulating signal m(t )

Amplitude-modulated signal
Ac 1  ka m(t )  cos(2 f c t )

Frequency-modulated signal
Ac cos 2 f c t  2 k f  m( )d 
 t

 0 

7
Amplitude Modulation (AM)

m(t ) envelope

A base-band signal s  t   Ac 1  ka m(t )  cos(2 f ct )

amplitude sensitivity
c  t   Ac cos(2 f c t )
(volts-1)

carrier amplitude
carrier frequency

8
Frequency Domain
Ac ka Ac
S f    f  f c     f  f c    M  f  f c   M  f  f c 
2 2

Bandwidth: Transmission bandwidth is 2W Hertz


Power:  - functions are dominant, yet carry no information.
9
Frequency Domain

Negative frequencies become visible for positive frequencies

Upper Sideband and Lower Sideband

Transmission bandwidth of AM is 2W
10
1st requirement: Carrier Frequency and Signal
Bandwidth
The carrier frequency fc is required to be much greater than the
highest frequency component W of the message signal m(t).

f c  W
W is the message bandwidth.

Otherwise, the envelope (or amplitude) cannot be visualized


and therefore cannot be detected satisfactorily
by an envelope detector.

11
1st requirement

fc < W
fc >> W

12
AM detection
 A simple and highly effective demodulation device is
envelope detector.
 It consists of a diode and a resistor–capacitor filter. First
the diode is forward-biased and the capacitor C charges
up rapidly to peak value. When input signal falls below
this value, the diode becomes reverse-biased and the
capacitor C discharges slowly through the load resistor
Rl.

13
Envelope Detector Output

contains a ripple at the carrier frequency


removed by low-pass filtering
14
2nd requirement: Over-modulation

percentage modulation
max ka m  t   100
t

s  t   Ac 1  ka m(t )  cos(2 f c t )
over-modulation
results in envelope distortion

ka m  t   1 for all t ka m  t   1 for some t


15
Single-tone Modulation
m(t )  Am cos  2 f m t 

s  t   Ac 1   cos  2 f mt  cos(2 f ct ) modulation factor


  ka Am
16
Power Content

carrier power
1 2
2 Ac

signal power

2  18  2 Ac
2

17
AM Limitations and Improvements
Two major limitation
1. Amplitude modulation is wasteful of power (only a fraction
of the total transmitted power is affected by m(t)).
2. Amplitude modulation is wasteful of bandwidth (it
requires a transmission bandwidth equal to twice the
message bandwidth)

These limitations can be overcome using:


1.Double sideband-suppressed carrier (DSB-SC)
modulation
2.Vestigial sideband (VSB) modulation
3. Single sideband (SSB) modulation
18

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