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Lecture4 Characterization of Communication Signals and Systems

1. Linear modulation encodes information in a carrier signal's amplitude and/or phase in a way that varies the transmitted signal's amplitude linearly with the modulating digital signal. It is more spectrally efficient but less power efficient than nonlinear modulation. 2. Nonlinear modulation does not vary the transmitted signal's amplitude linearly with the modulating signal. It is more power efficient but less spectrally efficient than linear modulation. Information is encoded in the carrier signal's frequency. 3. The document discusses various types of linear and nonlinear modulation techniques and their tradeoffs between spectral efficiency and power efficiency.

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

Lecture4 Characterization of Communication Signals and Systems

1. Linear modulation encodes information in a carrier signal's amplitude and/or phase in a way that varies the transmitted signal's amplitude linearly with the modulating digital signal. It is more spectrally efficient but less power efficient than nonlinear modulation. 2. Nonlinear modulation does not vary the transmitted signal's amplitude linearly with the modulating signal. It is more power efficient but less spectrally efficient than linear modulation. Information is encoded in the carrier signal's frequency. 3. The document discusses various types of linear and nonlinear modulation techniques and their tradeoffs between spectral efficiency and power efficiency.

Uploaded by

Nazar Aziz
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Digital Modulation Tradeoffs

1. Linear Modulation:
a) The amplitude of the modulated transmitted signal: s(t), varies linearly with
the modulating digital signal: m(t). Bandwidth efficient but power
inefficient. Examples: M-ASK, M-PAM, BPSK, DPSK, QPSK, π/4 PSK, M-
QAM.
b) Information encoded in carrier signal’s amplitude and/or in carrier’s phase.
c) Easier to adapt. More spectrally-efficient than nonlinear modulation.
d) Issues: differential encoding, pulse shaping, bit mapping.
e) Often requires linear power amplifiers to minimize signal distortions.
2. Nonlinear Modulation:
a) The amplitude of the modulated transmitted signal: s(t), does not vary linearly
with the modulating digital signal: m(t). Power efficient but bandwidth
inefficient. Examples: FSK, MSK, GMSK, constant envelope modulation.
b) Information encoded in carrier signal’s frequency.
c) Continuous phase (CPFSK) modulation is a special case of FM.
d) Bandwidth determined by Carson’s rule(1) (pulse shaping).
e) More robust to channel and power amplifier’s nonlinearities.
Modulation: Types and Techniques
Types of Digital-to-Analog Modulations

Bit rate is the number of bits transmitted per second: Rb = kRs .


Baud rate is the number of signal elements transmitted per second: Rs = Rb/k .
 In the analog transmission of digital data, if a signal unit is composed of k bits,
then the bit rate is k times higher than baud rate. Baud rate determines the channel
bandwidth required to transmit the modulated signal.
Digital Bandpass Modulation Techniques
 In digital communications, the modulating baseband message signal: m(t) is a binary
or M-ary digital data stream. The carrier is usually a sinusoidal signal.
Types of Digital Modulation Techniques
Performance Advantages of Digital Transmission
When compared to Analog Modulation
1. Digital transmission produces fewer data errors than analog transmission:
a) Data integrity & noise immunity: Easier to detect and correct information-bearing data errors, since
transmitted data is binary (1’s & 0’s : only two distinct values) .
b) Error coding is used to detect and correct digital transmission errors.
c) Regenerative capability: Regenerative digital repeaters placed along the transmission channel can
detect a distorted digital signal and retransmit a new, clean digital data signal. These repeaters
minimize the accumulation of noise and signal distortion along the transmission channel.
2. Permits higher transmission data rates: Economical to build transmission
links of very high bandwidth. Optical fiber designed for digital transmission.
3. Better spectral efficiency: Effective use of limited frequency resources
(narrow bandwidth) to send a large amount of data.
4. Security & privacy: Enables encryption algorithms in information-bearing
digital bit stream signals.
5. Easy to multiplex multiple sources of information: Voice, video and data in a
single transmission channel, since all signals are made up of 1’s and 0’s.
6. Easy to integrate computer/communication systems.
7. Digital equipment consumes less DC power in a smaller physical size.
Bandpass Signals
 Bandpass communication signals are obtained by
modulating a baseband analog or digital signal on to a
carrier signal
 Definitions:
 Baseband Signal: waveform whose spectral magnitude
is non-zero for frequencies at or near f = 0. Negligible
spectral magnitude at f >> 0.
 Bandpass Signal: waveform whose spectral magnitude
is non-zero for frequencies concentrated in a band
around a frequency f = ± fc where fc >> 0. The frequency
fc is called the carrier or center frequency.

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Communication System
Information Transmission Information
Source Channel Sink

m (t) s (t)
Noise
r (t)
˜m (t)
Baseband Modulation & n (t) Demodulation Baseband
Signal Carrier & Carrier Signal
Processing Circuits Circuits Processing

Transmitter (Tx) Receiver (Rx)

Goal: Design system to transmit information, m(t), with as


little deterioration as possible within design constraints of
signal power, signal bandwidth, and system cost

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Bandpass Signals
A | G( f ) |

 Baseband signal spectrum : f


-B 0 +B

 v(t) = g(t) cos (2p fc t)

 Bandpass signal spectrum :


|V ( f ) |
A A
2 2

-fc-B -fc -fc+B fc-B fc fc+B


f

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Bandpass Signals
 Definitions:
 Modulation: process of translating a baseband information signal into
a bandpass signal with a carrier frequency fc using amplitude, phase,
and/or frequency variations of carrier.
 Bandpass signal s(t)  modulated signal, also called RF signal
 Baseband information signal g(t)  modulating signal
 Carrier Frequency
 Frequency of oscillatory sinusoid that is normally an assigned
frequency for wireless type transmissions (AM Radio, TV, 3G, etc.) 
FCC
 Multiple baseband signals of same type (BW) assigned different fc’s so
that spectrum can be shared
 Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA)

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Bandpass Signals
 Modulation
 Mathematically  mapping operation that transfers source
information onto bandpass signal
 Functionally  translation or shifting of baseband signal
spectrum to higher frequency
 Necessary for transmission through most channels
 Necessary for wireless transmissions in particular
 Antenna size must be at least  0.1 = c / fc

 Large fc required for small antenna

 Antenna’s with large “gain” (focusing ability) require size >> 1

 Satellite dish has large gain (30-35 dB)

 Choose fc = 4 GHz then size = 20  = 1.5 m


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Signal Representation
 Any physical bandpass waveform, v(t), can be
represented by
v(t )  Re g (t ) e j 2p fct   R(t ) cos2p f ct   (t )
 From block diagram on previous Slides
 Signal at Tx output  s(t) = v(t)
 Channel noise  n(t) = v(t)
 Signal + noise @ Rx input  r(t) = v(t)

 g(t)  “complex envelope” of v(t)


 Complex?  signal, in general, may have amplitude and
phase information

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Complex Representation
 Another complex representation for bandpass signal is

v(t )  x(t ) cos( 2p f ct )  y(t ) sin( 2p f ct )


 Note that  (t) information is contained in both x(t) and
y(t)
and complex baseband envelope is
g (t )  x(t )  j y(t )  | g (t ) | e jg (t )  R(t ) e j (t )

Cartesian
where Cartesian from Polar is
Form x(t )  Re{ g (t )}  R(t ) cos (t ) Polar Form
y (t )  Im{ g (t )}  R(t ) sin  (t )

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Complex Representation
 Polar from Cartesian form :
R(t )  | g (t ) |  x 2 (t )  y 2 (t )
 y (t ) 
 (t )  tan 1

 x(t ) 
 v(t) has bandpass spectrum concentrated at f = fc
 g(t) has baseband spectrum concentrated at f = 0
 g(t)  v(t) is often called:
 Lowpass to bandpass translation
 Frequency translation, shifting, or heterodyning
 Superheterodyne Rx

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Modulation
 g(t), x(t), y(t), R(t), and  (t) are all baseband
waveforms
 g(t) is complex while x(t), y(t), R(t), and  (t) are all real
 R(t) must be > 0 (non-negative) since it is magnitude of
polar form

 Bandpass signal
v(t )  Re g (t ) e j 2p fct   R(t ) cos2p f ct   (t )
 e j 2p fct or cos2p f c t  translate or shift baseband G(f ) to
fc
 Multiplication in time is convolution in frequency

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Modulation  cos2p f t  c

| G( f ) | 1 1
A

2 2

-B 0 +B
f f
-fc fc

|V ( f ) |


A A
2 2

-fc-B -fc -fc+B fc-B fc fc+B


f

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Modulation
 v(t )  Re g (t ) e j 2p fct   R(t ) cos2p f ct   (t )

 If g(t) = constant then v(t) is pure sinusoid


 If g(t)  constant then the amplitude and/or phase of
v(t) will vary as a function of time
 R(t) = | g(t) | is the amplitude modulation (AM)
  (t) is the phase modulation (PM)
 Frequency modulation (FM) is a specific type of phase
modulation

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Modulation
 Cartesian form of complex baseband signal:
 x(t )  Re{g (t )}
g (t )  x(t )  j y(t ) where 
 y (t )  Im{ g (t )}
 x(t)  in phase modulation of g(t)
 y(t)  quadrature modulation of g(t)
 Quadrature = 90° phase difference
 Complex representation is VERY important in modern
communication systems with DSP
 Communication Rx’s often break received signal into two
baseband signal channels:
 x(t) = in phase (I) & y(t) = quadrature (Q)  I & Q channels

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I & Q Channels
Bandpass Signal
(RF or IF)
cos(2p fc t)

-sin(2p fc t)

 Why use 2 channels when one will do?


 Sampling rate of A/D converter for digital baseband signal
processing will be 2  smaller compared to sampling rate for single
channel
 Cost/complexity of many A/D converters is  to fs
 Useful property for computer simulations of communication
systems
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Complex Signal Plot
Q
| g (t ) |  R(t )  x 2 (t )  y 2 (t )
y(t)
 y (t ) 
 (t )  (t )  tan 1  
I  x(t ) 
x(t)
Phasor Rotates CCW @ 2p fc (rad/s)

AM  vector magnitude changes as phasor rotates


BPSK  magnitude constant but phase switches 180° in
discrete jumps between 1/0 data bits

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Modulation
 Modulation  encode source information m(t) into a bandpass
signal s(t) (see block diagram)
 Using general complex representation
s(t )  Re g (t ) e j 2p fct   R(t ) cos2p f ct   (t )
 Complex envelope g(t) is function of modulation signal m(t) :
g (t )  g[m(t )]
where g[] is peforming a mapping operation on m(t)
 Different mapping functions for different modulation types
 Example: AM  g [m(t)] = Ac [1 + m(t)]

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Demodulation
 Demodulation: convert bandpass signal s(t) back into a
baseband signal  another frequency translation
 Assume  (t) is zero  amplitude modulation only, e.g.
R(t)
~ (t )  s(t )  cos2p f t   R(t ) cos2p f t  cos2p f t 
m c c c
Using trigonome tric identity : 2 cos 2 ( x)  1  cos 2 x
~ (t )  R(t ) cos 2 2p f t   1 R(t )1  cos4p f t 
m c 2 c
Desired Frequency
Baseband Doubled
Signal
~ (t )  1 R(t )  1 R(t ) cos4p f t 
m 2 2 c Signal

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Demodulation
Bandpass | S( f ) | Bandpass
Signal A Signal
A
2 2

 fc
f
~ fc
Frequency |M(f )| Frequency
Doubled Signal Doubled Signal
LPF
A A A
4 2 4

2fc 2fc
Desired Baseband
Signal

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