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ECE 342 Communication Theory

Fall 2005, Class Notes


Prof. Tiany J Li
www: http://www.eecs.lehigh.edu/jingli/teach
email: jingli@ece.lehigh.edu
Analog Communications
Modulation and Communication Systems
Modulation is a process that causes a shift in the range of frequencies
in a signal. In eect, modulation converts the message signal from
lowpass to bandpass.
Two types of communication systems.
Baseband communication: does not use modulation.
The term baseband is used to designate the band of frequen-
cies of the signal delivered by the source or the input transducer.
In telephony, the baseband is the audio band (band of voice
signals) of 0 to 3.5kHz.
In television, the baseband is the video band occupying 0 to
4.3MHz.
For digital data or pulse-code modulation (PCM) using bipo-
lar signaling at a rate R
b
pulses per second, the baseband is 0
to R
b
Hz.
Baseband signals cannot be transmitted over a radio link but
are suitable for transmission over a pair of wires, coaxial cables,
or optical bers. Examples include:
local telephony communication
short-haul PCM between two exchanges
long-distance PCM over optical bers
Carrier communication: uses modulation.
Eg: amplitude modulation, frequency modulation, phase mod-
ulation.
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A comment about pulse-modulated signals (including pulse
amplitude modulation (PAM), pulse width modulation (PWM),
pulse position modulation (PPM), pulse code modulation (PCM)
and delta modulation (DM)): despite the term modulation,
these signals are baseband signals. Pulse-modulation schemes
are really baseband coding schemes, and they yield baseband
signals. These signal must still modulate a carrier in order to
shift their spectra.
Objectives of Modulation
To translate the frequency of the lowpass signal to the passband of the
channel so that the spectrum of the transmitted bandpass signal will
match the passband characteristics of the channel. (Eg. in transmission
of speech over microwave links, the transmission frequencies must be
increased to the gigahertz range.)
To reduce the size of the antennas. (To obtain ecient radiation of
electromagnetic energy, the antenna must be longer than 1/10 of the
wavelength.)
To accommodate for the simultaneous transmission of signals from sev-
eral message sources (e.g. frequency-division multiplexing).
To expand the bandwidth of the transmitted signal in order to increase
its noise and interference immunity in transmission over a noisy channel
(i.e. use modulation to exchange transmission bandwidth for the signal-
to-noise ratio).
Energy Spectral Density and Power Spectral Density
Three ways of computing the energy of a signal g(t):
E
g
=

|g(t)|
2
dt = R
g
(0) =

|G(f)|
2
df
where R
g
() = g() g

() is the (time) auto correlation function of


g(t).
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G
g
(f)

= |G(f)|
2
is called the energy spectral density of a signal g(t).
|G(f)|
2
equals the Fourier Transform of the time autocorrelation
function R
g
() = g() g

() =

g(t)g

(t )dt.
It represents the amount of energy per unit bandwidth present in
the signal at various frequencies.
Energy of the signal can be computed by integrating the energy
spectral density over all frequencies:
E
g
=

G
g
(f)df
If g(t) is passed through a lter/channel with the impulse response
h(t), and the output signal is y(t), then the energy of the output
signal is
E
y
(t) =

|G(f)|
2
|Y (f)|
2
df
and the energy spectral density of the output signal y(t) is
G
y
(f) = G
g
(f)G
h
(f) = |G(f)|
2
|H(f)|
2
S
g
(f)

= lim
T
1
T
|G(f)|
2
is called the power spectral density (PSD)
of a signal g(t)
S
g
(f) equals the Fourier Transform of the time-average autocorre-
lation function R
g
() = lim
T
1
T

T/2
T/2
g(t)g

(t )dt.
It represents the amount of power per unit bandwidth present in
the signal at various frequencies.
The power of the signal can be computed by integrating the PSD
over all frequencies:
P
g
=

S
g
(f)df
If g(t) is passed through a lter/channel with the impulse response
h(t), and the output signal is y(t), then the power of the output
signal is
P
y
(t) = lim
T
1
T

T/2
T/2
|G(f)|
2
|Y (f)|
2
df
and the energy spectral density of the output signal y(t) is
S
y
(f) = S
g
(f)S
h
(f)
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Modulation
Consider a lowpass, power-type signal, m(t), of bandwidth, W (that is,
M(f) = 0, for |f| > W). Let P
m
= lim
T
1
T

T/2
T/2
|m(t)|
2
dt denote the
power of the signal. The message signal m(t) is transmitted through
the communication channel by impressing it on a sinusoidal carrier
signal of the form
c(t) = A
c
cos(2f
c
t +
c
)
where A
c
is the carrier amplitude,
f
c
is the carrier frequency,

c
is the carrier phase.
We say that the message signal m(t) modulates the carrier signal c(t)
in either amplitude, frequency, or phase if after modulation, the ampli-
tude, frequency, or phase of the signal become functions of the message
signal. This results in amplitude modulation (AM), frequency
modulation (FM), or phase modulation (PM). The latter two
types of modulation are similar, and belong to the class of modulation
known as angle modulation.
Four types of amplitude modulation:
Double-Sideband Suppressed-Carrier AM (DSB-SC)
Conventional Double-Sideband AM (DSB, a.k.a. conventional AM)
Single-Sideband AM (SSB)
Vestigial-Sideband AM (VSB)
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Double-Sideband Suppressed-Carrier AM
lowpass message signal m(t), bandwidth W; also assume the average
of m(t) is zero (which is a valid assumption for many signals including
audio signals).
carrier signal c(t) = A
c
cos(2f
c
t) (without loss of generality, we as-
sumed the carrier phase is 0)
DSB-SC AM modulated signal
u(t) = m(t)c(t) = A
c
m(t)cos(2f
c
t)
u(t) has bandwidth 2W, i.e. double the bandwidth of m(t).
u(t) has double sidebands: upper sideband |f| > f
c
; lower side-
band |f| < f
c
.
u(t) does not contain a carrier component (hence carrier suppressed).
All the transmitted power is contained in the modulating (message)
signal m(t).
Spectrum of DSB-SC signals: Assume m(t) M(f),
U(f) = F[A
c
m(t)cos(2f
c
t)] =
A
c
2
[M(f f
c
) +M(f +f
c
)]
Power content of DSB-SC signals
P
u
= lim
T
1
T

T/2
T/2
u
2
(t)dt
= lim
T
1
T

T/2
T/2
A
2
c
m
t
(t)cos
2
(2f
c
t)dt
=
A
2
c
2
lim
T
1
T

T/2
T/2
m
2
(t)dt +
A
2
c
2
lim
T
1
T

T/2
T/2
m
2
(t)cos(4f
c
t)dt
=
A
2
c
2
P
m
(1)
(The overall integral of m
2
(t)cos(4f
c
t) is almost zero. Since the result
of the integral is divided by T, and T becomes very large, the second
term in the equation becomes zero.)
Demodulation of DSB-SC signals:
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Requires a phase-coherent or synchronous demodulator. That
is, the phase of the locally generated sinusoid should ideally be
equal to the phase of the received-carrier signal.
Steps (synchronous demodulator):
STEP 1. rst multiply received signal r(t) by a locally gener-
ated sinusoid cos(2f
c
t + )
STEP 2. pass the product signal through an ideal lowpass lter
with the bandwidth W
Mathematically:
r(t) = u(t) = A
c
m(t)cos(2f
c
t) assuming noiseless channel
r(t)cos(2f
c
t + ) = A
c
m(t)cos(2f
c
t)cos(2f
c
t + )
=
1
2
A
c
m(t)cos() +
1
2
A
c
m(t)cos(4f
c
t +)

filtered out
(2)
The power in the demodulated signal is decreased by a factor
of cos
2
= in need for a synchronous demodulator
Two ways to generate phase-locked sinusoidal signals at the receiver:
Phase-locked loop (PLL) and using a pilot tone.
The method of pilot tone:
Add a pilot tone, i.e. a carrier component, into the transmitted
signal.
The power of the pilot tone, A
2
p
/2 is selected to be signicantly
smaller than that of the modulated signal u(t).
The transmitted signal is still double sideband, but no longer car-
rier suppressed.
At the receiver, a narrow band lter tuned to frequency f
c
lters
out the pilot signal component; its output is used to multiply the
received signal.
Note that the presence of the pilot signal results in a DC component
in the demodulated signal; this needs to be subtracted out in order
to recover m(t).
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Disadvantages of pilot tone: a certain portion of the transmitted
signal power is allocated to the transmission of the pilot.
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Conventional DSB AM
A conventional AM modulated signal consists of a large carrier compo-
nent, in addition to the double-sideband AM modulated signal:
u(t) = A
c
[1 + m(t)]cos(2f
c
t)
where the message signal is constrained to satisfy |m(t)| 1. (If
m(t) < 1, the AM signal is over-modulated, causing a more com-
plex demodulation process.)
For convenience, let us express m(t) as
m(t) = am
n
(t)
where m
n
(t) = m(t)/ max|m(t)|, and a is called the modulation in-
dex and 0 < a < 1. Hence
u(t) = A
c
[1 +am
n
(t)]cos(2f
c
t)
Spectrum of the conventional AM signal:
U(f) = F[A
c
[1 +am
n
(t)]cos(2f
c
t)]
=
A
c
a
2
[M
n
(f f
c
) + M
n
(f + f
c
)] +
A
c
2
[(f f
c
) +(f + f
c
)]
Power of the conventional AM signal:
P
u
=
A
2
c
2
(1 +P
m
) =
A
2
c
2
(1 +a
2
P
m
n
)
Demodulation:
No need for a synchronous demodulator.
We can use a simple envelope detector (i.e. a rectier + lowpass
lter) followed by a transformer to demodulate it:
STEP 1. Rectify the signal: i.e. eliminating the negative val-
ues. This would not aect the message signal since the envelop
(amplitude) 1 +m(t) > 0.
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STEP 2. Pass the rectied signal through a low pass lter
whose bandwidth matches that of the message signal.
STEP 3. Eliminate the DC component in the output of the
envelope detector through a transformer.
Note the output of the envelope detector (i.e. a rectier and a
lowpass lter) is (ideally) d(t) = g
1
+g
2
m(t), where g
1
is the DC
term (introduced by the carrier component at the transmitter)
and g
2
is a gain factor due to the signal demodulator.
Power eciency:
=
useful power
total power
=
P
m
1 + P
m
=
a
2
P
m
n
1 + a
2
P
m
n
For practical signals, the eciency is on the order of 25% or lower.
Major advantage of the conventional AM is the simple demodulator
= widely used in AM radio broadcast.
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Single Sideband (SSB) AM
The DSB spectrum has two sideband: upper side-band (USB) and low
side-band (LSB), both containing the complete information of the base-
band signal.
= sucient to transmit only one sideband: Single-sideband trans-
mission. SSB transmission requires only one-half the bandwidth of the
DSB signal.
The Single-sideband (suppressed-carrier) signals can be demodulated
using a synchronous demodulator in a way identical to demodulating
DSB-SC signals:
Multiplying a USB (LSB) signal by cos(2f
c
t) shifts its spectrum
to the left and right by f
c
.
Low-passing ltering of the signal yields the desired baseband sig-
nal.
Generating SSB AM signals:
In the frequency domain:
generate double-sideband signals and use an ideal bandpass lter
to lter one of the sidebands of a DSB signal.
In the time domain:
Upper sideband: u(t) = A
c
m(t)cos(2f
c
t) A
c
m(t)sin(2f
c
t)
Lower sideband: u(t) = A
c
m(t)cos(2f
c
t) + A
c
m(t)sin(2f
c
t)
where m(t) is the Hilbert transform of m(t).
Hilbert transform of a signal m(t) results in a new signal

m(t) that
has exactly the same frequency components present in m(t) with the
same amplitude - except there is a 90
o
phase delay (i.e. a /2 phase
shifter).
In eect, after Hilbert transform, the spectrum of the signal at posi-
tive frequencies is multiplied by j (i.e. e
j2f
0
t
becomes e
j2f
0
t/2
),
and the spectrum of the signal at negative frequencies is multiplied
by +j (i.e. e
j2f
0
t
becomes e
j(2f
0
t/2)
)
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This is equivalent to multiplying the spectrum (Fourier transform)
of the signal by j sgn(f) (or ltering by a lter with response
j sgn(f)):
if m(t) M(f)
then m(t) j sgn(f)M(f)
Since
1
t
jsgn(f), in the time domain, the operation of Hilbert
transform is equivalent to a convolutional operation:
m(t) =
1
t
m(t) =
1

m(
t
d
The impact of a phase-oset in the demodulator:
Consider for example USB signals:
r(t) = m(t) = A
c
m(t)cos(2f
c
t) A
c
m(t)sin(2f
c
t)
r(t)cos(2f
c
t +) =
1
2
A
c
m(t)cos() +
1
2
m(t)sin()
+double frequency terms
The impact of phase-oset is two-fold:
- It reduces the amplitude of of the desired signal m(t) by cos()
(same as DSB-SC)
- It also introduces an undesirable sideband signal (interference)
due to the presence of m(t)
Hence, coherent demodulator is desired, and the use of pilot tone
is a very eective method in SSB Am systems (at the cost of some
power eciency).
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Vestigial Sideband (VSB) AM
Motivation:
SSB AM is bandwidth ecient. The lter method to generate
SSB requires an exact sideband lter which has an extremely sharp
cuto in the vicinity of the carrier (particularly when m(t) has a
large power concentrated in the vicinity of f = 0). Such lter
characteristics are very dicult to implement in practice.
Relax the SSB system by allow vestige, which is a portion of the
unwanted sideband.
Justication:
VSB AM system can be implemented by generating a DSB-SC AM
signal and passing it through a sideband lter with the frequency
response H(f).
To recover the original message spectrum, the VSB-lter charac-
teristics must satisfy:
H(f f
c
) +H(f + f
c
) = constant for any |f| W
where W is the bandwidth of the message signal m(t).
In practice, to minimize distortion of the message signal, the VSB-
lter should also have a linear phase over its passband.
Practice:
Suitable for signals that have a strong low-frequency component,
such as video signals. VSB used in standard TV broadcasting.
A carrier component is generally transmitted so that the demodula-
tor can extract a phase-coherent reference for synchronous demod-
ulation. In TV broadcast, a large carrier component is transmitted.
and it is possible to recover the message using a simple envelope
detector (same as the conventional DSB AM in radio broadcast-
ing).
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