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Noise in Analog Communication Systems

The document discusses the effects of noise on various analog communication systems, including baseband systems, DSB-SC AM, SSB-AM, and conventional AM. It highlights that DSBSC does not improve output SNR compared to baseband systems, while also addressing the impact of noise in angle modulation. The analysis includes details on signal processing and noise characteristics in these modulation schemes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views24 pages

Noise in Analog Communication Systems

The document discusses the effects of noise on various analog communication systems, including baseband systems, DSB-SC AM, SSB-AM, and conventional AM. It highlights that DSBSC does not improve output SNR compared to baseband systems, while also addressing the impact of noise in angle modulation. The analysis includes details on signal processing and noise characteristics in these modulation schemes.

Uploaded by

akshayrcbe
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Noise in Analog

communication
systems
Effect of noise on a baseband
system
• Baseband systems serve as a basis for comparison of various
modulation systems,
• There is no carrier demodulation to be performed.
• The receiver consists only of an ideal lowpass filter with the
bandwidth W. The noise power at the output of the receiver, for a
white noise input is therefore

PR the received power.


Effect of noise in DSBSC AM
• In double-sideband suppressed-carrier amplitude
modulation (DSB-SC AM), the transmit ted signal is

• The received signal at the output of the receiver noise-


limiting filter is the sum of this signal and filtered noise
• A filtered noise process can be expressed in terms of its in-
phase and quadrature components,
It is assumed that we are employing a coherent or synchronous
demodulator. With this assumption, without loss of generality, we
assume that phase difference
the power contents of nc(t) and n(t) are assumed
equal.
• Power spectral density od n(t) is given by

• The noise power is


• Output SNR

• Output SNR for DSBSC

It is identical
( 𝑆to/ 𝑁 )𝑏
• In DSBSC the output SNR is same as the SNR for
baseband system.
• DSBSC doesn’t provide any SNR improvement.
Effect of noise on SSB -AM
• The modulated signal in SSB-AM

• The input to the demodulator is


Effect of noise on Conventional AM
• In conventional AM, the modulated signal is,

• The received signal at the input to the demodulator is

• After mixing and lowpass filtering


Effect of noise in angle modulation

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