Gaussian Filtered Minimum Shift Keying: Gina Colangelo EE194 - SDR
Gaussian Filtered Minimum Shift Keying: Gina Colangelo EE194 - SDR
Gaussian Filtered
Minimum Shift Keying
Gina Colangelo
EE194 - SDR
Topics
Background
Minimum Shift Keying (MSK)
Gaussian Filtering
Spectral Efficiency GMSK vs. MSK
Common Applications
Introduction
Digital modulation schemes are becoming
increasingly important in wireless
communication systems.
Using an unfiltered binary data stream to
modulate an RF carrier will produce an RF
spectrum of considerable bandwidth.
Techniques have been developed to
minimize this bandwidth, improve spectral
performance, and ease detection.
Background
MSK or Minimum Shift Keying is a digital
modulation scheme in which the phase of the
remains continuous while the frequency
changes.
GMSK or Gaussian-filtered Minimum Shift
Keying differs from MSK in that a Gaussian
Filter of an appropriate bandwidth is used
before the modulation stage.
We will first discuss MSK to understand the
need for GMSK.
MSK – Minimum Shift Keying
MSK is a continuous phase FSK (CPFSK)
where the frequency changes occur at the
carrier zero crossings.
MSK is unique due to the relationship
between the frequency of a logic 0 and 1.
The difference between the frequencies is always
½ the data rate.
This is the minimum frequency spacing that
allows 2 FSK signals to be coherently orthogonal.
MSK – How It Works
The baseband modulation starts with a bitstream of
0’s and 1’s and a bit-clock.
The baseband signal is generated by first
transforming the 0/1 encoded bits into -1/1 using an
NRZ filter.
This signal is then frequency modulated to produce
the complete MSK signal.
The amount of overlap that occurs between bits will
contribute to the inter-symbol interference (ISI).
Example of MSK
1200 bits/sec baseband MSK data signal
Frequency spacing = 600Hz