Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

30
Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation

Transcript of Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Page 1: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

� Lecture 3

� Paul Flynn

Modulation

Page 2: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Frequency Spectrum

Page 3: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Long Waves, Medium Waves and Short Waves

Page 4: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Modulation of Analog SignalsModulation of Analog Signals

Amplitude Modulation (AM)

Frequency Modulation (FM)

Phase Modulation (PM)

Page 5: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Figure 5.24 Analog-to-analog modulation

Page 6: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Types of analog-to-analog modulation

Page 7: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Amplitude modulation (AM)

Page 8: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Frequency modulation (FM)

Page 9: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Phase Modulation (PM)

Page 10: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Digital modulation

� Three basic methods

� – Amplitude shift keying (ASK)

� – Frequency shift keying (FSK)

� – Phase shift keying (PSK

Page 11: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Amplitude shift keying (ASK)

� Use different amplitude to represent 0 and 1.

� – Simple, low bandwidth – Sensitive to interference.

� • Multi-path propagation, noise or path loss heavily influence the amplitude.

� – A constant amplitude in wireless environment can not be guaranteed.

� • Used in wired optical communication.

� – A light pulse =1, no light =0.

Page 12: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.
Page 13: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Frequency shift keying (FSK)

� Binary FSK (BFSK) – One frequency for 0 and one

� frequency for 1. – needs larger bandwidth

� • Avoid discontinuity – Discontinuity creates high

� frequencies as side effects. – Continuous phase modulation (CPM) can be used.

� • Demodulation: – Use two bandpass filters for 2 frequencies.

Page 14: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.
Page 15: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Phase shift keying (PSK)

� Use shift in phase to represent data.

� • Binary PSK (BPSK) – Shift the phase by 180.

� • Synchronization is important

� • More resistant to interference

� • More complex transmitters and receivers.

Page 16: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.
Page 17: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Digitizing Analog Signals

1.1.SampleSample

2.2.QuantizeQuantize

3.3.Encode Encode

Page 18: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Sampling Analog SignalsOriginal

Signal

Sample Times

Sample Values

Reformed Signal

Page 19: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Digitizing Analog SignalsOriginal

Signal and

Samples

Actual Sample Values

Quantized Sample Values

Reconstructed Reconstructed SignalSignal

Original Original Signal Signal

Page 20: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Linear QuantizingActual

Sample Values

Quantized Sample Values

Reconstructed Signal

Original Signal

Page 21: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Linear Quantizing

Value of Input Signal

Value of Output Signal

-1-2-3-4-5 1 2 3 4

1

2

3

4

-1

-2

-3

-4

5

Quantizing Error

(output-input)

Linear: quantizing steps for all segments are the same height.

Linear: quantizing steps for all segments are the same height.

SQRSQRSQRSQR

2-42

Page 22: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Quantizing Noise

Transmit Receive

Page 23: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Voice Digitization Process

Pulse Amplitude Modulation

Sampler

Quantizer EncoderAnalog

Input"PAM" Pulses

"PAM" Pulses

PCM Output Signal

Continous Signals

Discrete-time Continous- Amplitude

Signals

Discrete-time Discrete- Amplitude

Signals

Digital bit stream

Page 24: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Pulse Code ModulationWaveform-Time Domain-Nondifferential

Sample Values

Quantized value of each sample is coded

Quantized value of each sample is coded

Page 25: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Coding

How many bits are needed to code this many levels?

How many bits are needed to code this many levels?

111

110

101

100

011

010

001

000

Answer: 3 bits for 8 levelsL=2n

Page 26: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Companding or Non-linear EncodingCompanding = compressing +

expandingWhy companding?Quantization levels not evenly spacedReduces overall signal distortionCan also be done by companding

Page 27: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

Binary Signaling Encoding Schemes1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1

NRZ-L

NRZ-M

NRZ-S

RZ

Biphase-L Manchester

Biphase-M

Biphase-S

Differential Manchester

Delay Modulation

AMI- Bipolar

0 = 1

0 to 1

1 to 0

1=sq

sq 1 & 0

c x on 1 chg on 0

alt mark inversion (B8ZS)

sq wv 1 inv 2nd 1

n

n

n

n

s

s

s

s

n

n

EIA 232

B8Zs

Page 28: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

2B1Q (ISDN)

EACH LEVEL REPRESENTS TWO BITS 00, 01, 10, AND 11

Page 29: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

The digital Loop Signal

  

0v

-v

+vBipolar NRZ

(EIA-232)

+v

0v

-v

Bipolar AMI

0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1

+v

0v

-v

Actual Signal

Page 30: Lecture 3 Paul Flynn Modulation. Frequency Spectrum.

AMI (Alternate Mark Conversion) Violation

  

AMI

Violation

0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1

+v

0v

-v

START OF CONTROL INFO

NO MORE THAN 15 0s IN A ROW