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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 1 Bandpass Spectrum Spectrum of bandpass signal is directly related to spectrum of complex envelope We have already shown that f f c -B f c f c +B -f c -B - f c - f c +B -B 0 +B f
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 2 Bandpass PSD PSD of bandpass signal is Derivation is in book but this is intuitively correct since FT V/Hz so that PSD | FT | 2 W/Hz Average normalized power of bandpass waveform is Bandpass power found from baseband signal representation g(t) if desired, otherwise from PSD
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 3 Peak Envelope Power Peak Envelope Power (PEP) is the average power that would be obtained if | g(t) | were held constant at its peak value Useful measure of power for high power Tx specifications »AM Broadcast Radio, TV, etc. Transmitters must be able to handle instantaneous signal power, e.g. peak, without saturating or being damaged »Average power does not provide any measure of what the worst- case peak power may be PEP given by
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 4 AM Signal General meaning of amplitude modulation the time variation of the amplitude of the carrier signal contains/represents the source information signal m(t) There are many types that meet the general definition Amplitude Modulated (AM) signal is a specific case of the general class of amplitude modulated signals where This is used for AM broadcast radio and is also called Double Side Band – Large Carrier DSB-LC
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 5 AM Signal AM Baseband Signal AM Bandpass Signal AM signal g(t) is purely real since m(t) only represents amplitude information so Using Euler’s Identity So
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 6 AM Signal Spectrum AM Baseband Spectrum Table 2-2, pg. 64 : 1 (f) so A c represents DC power and constant carrier such that even if m(t) = 0 the carrier signal s(t) = A c cos 2 f c t is always present DSB-LC -B 0 +B f 0 f f
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 7 AM Signal Spectrum AM Bandpass Spectrum LSB + USB = DSB LC
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 8 AM Signal Power Using baseband signal g(t) If DC power in source waveform m(t) is zero then 2 m(t) = 0 No delta function in M(f ) Signal power is “wasted” on carrier does not contribute to S/N at Rx of the recovered information waveform LC enables extremely simple Rx circuit but AM is power ineffecient
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 9 Communication System 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 ˜ Information Source Baseband Signal Processing Modulation & Carrier Circuits Transmission Channel Demodulation & Carrier Circuits Baseband Signal Processing Information Sink Noise n (t) m (t) s (t) r (t) m (t) Transmitter (Tx)Receiver (Rx)
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 10 Rx S+N Model for received signal plus noise s(t) is signal out of transmitter »Spectral response may be modified by channel »Noise added in channel Thus the signal at Rx input is If channel is distortion free (a big IF!!) then »Constant amplitude ( A ) and linear phase (2 f T g )
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 11 Rx S+N Distortion free received signal + noise is T g and ( f c ) must be estimated by Rx for digital signals Accomplished by bit synchronizer for digital signals Not necessarily required for analog signals (e.g. AM)
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 12 Rx S+N A high performance Rx is designed to correct for Channel attenuation amplify signal Channel delay synchronization circuits Channel frequency distortion equalizing filter If channel effects are largely corrected then Uncompensated effects of channel spectral response can be included in g(t) if needed This is a best-case approach and is not valid for some applications wireless mobile radio
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 13 Analog Filters Filters modify the spectral characteristics of an input signal to produce desired output signal Variety of needs and applications Pulse shaping for minimizing BW Correcting for distortion caused by channel Selection of desired signals from specific frequencies Rejection of undesired signals and noise outside of desired signal BW Filters classified by type of construction (LC, SAW, etc.) and by spectral response characteristics (Butterworth, Chebyshev, etc.) Elements used to construct filter should have high Q
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 14 Analog Filters Two Q types to describe filter quality Energy Storage Q »LC circuit elements are imperfect and have some resistance which leads to energy dissipation via heat »Desire high Q for individual circuit elements Frequency Selective Q »f o is resonant frequency (design center frequency) & B is 3-dB BW »Measure of the filter’s overall ability to select desired frequency band »Higher selectivity means narrower band filter on a % basis
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 15 Analog Filter Types
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 16 Analog Filter Types
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ECE 4710: Lecture #16 17 Filter Responses Butterworth Maximally flat response in passband Modest rolloff for attenuation response Chebyshev Sharpest rolloff for minimum number of circuit elements 1-3 dB amplitude variation in passband ripple Bessel Linear phase response in passband Distortion-free filter to preserve pulse shape Raised Cosine Pulse shaping to minimize signal BW and no ISI
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