DC Lecture Notes & Materials
DC Lecture Notes & Materials
ON
DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS
UNIT I
ELEMENTS OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
or correct some of the errors in the information bearing bits. There are two
methods of channel coding:
1. Block Coding: The encoder takes a block of k information bits from
the source encoder and adds r error control bits, where r is dependent on k and
error control capabilities desired.
2. Convolution Coding: The information bearing message stream is encoded in
a continuous fashion by continuously interleaving information bits and error
control bits.
The Channel decoder recovers the information bearing bits from the coded binary
stream. Error detection and possible correction is also performed by the channel
decoder.
The important parameters of coder / decoder are: Method of coding, efficiency,
error control capabilities and complexity of the circuit.
MODULATOR:
The Modulator converts the input bit stream into an electrical waveform
suitable for transmission over the communication channel. Modulator can be
effectively used to minimize the effects of channel noise, tomatch the
frequency
spectrumoftransmittedsignalwithchannel characte
capability to multiplex many signals.
DEMODULATOR:
The extraction of the message from the information bearing waveform produced by the modulation
is bit stream. The important parameter is the method of demodulation.
CHANNEL:
The Channel provides the electrical connection between
The different channels are: Pair of wires, Coaxial cable, Optical fibre,
Radio channel, Satellite channel or combination of any of these.
Transmission
Rate (measured in bits per second): This is a measure of the
number of bits that can be transmitted over the communication channel per unit time.
Bandwidth Requirements
(measured in Hz): This is a measure of the
spectrum that the communication system requires to transmit the information at the desired transm
T
ransmission Power (or Bit Energy) (measured in Watts (or Jules/bit)): This
represents the amount of power of the transmitted signal that would be required to
achieve a particular desired error probability.
1. Amount of energy in each digital bit (or pulse): Generally, the more energy a
digital bit (or pulse) has, the better the performance that the system will have.
2. The distance between the transmitter and receiver: Because energy is spread or
attenuated as it travels over the channel and more noise is added due to the
existence of more noise sources over long channels, generally the longer the path
that the digital transmitted signal has to travel, the worse the performance that the
system will have. However, you do not always have control over the distance
between the transmitted and receiver.
3. Amount of noise that is added to the signal: Certainly, the less the noise that is
added to the transmitted signal, the better the performance of the communication
system. We usually have limited control over the added noise.
4. Bandwidth of the transmission channel: By using larger bandwidth, we can
either transmit at a higher transmission bit rate while keeping the same probability o
bit error, or we can transmit at the same transmission bit rate but reduce the probab
communication system, the better the performance it will have.
3. Digital circuits are more reliable and cheaper compared to analog circuits.
4. The Hardware implementation is more flexible than analog hardware because of
the use of microprocessors, VLSI chips etc.
5. Signal processing functions like encryption, compression can be employed to
maintain the secrecy of the information.
6. Error detecting and Error correcting codes improve the system performance by
reducing the probability of error.
7. Combining digital signals using TDM is simpler than combining analog signals
using FDM. The different types of signals such as data, telephone, TV can be
treated as identical signals in transmission and switching in a digital
communication system.
8. We can avoid signal jamming using spread spectrum
technique. Disadvantages of Digital Communication:
1. Large System Bandwidth:- Digital transmission requires a large system
bandwidth to communicate the same information in a digital format as compared
to analog format.
2. System Synchronization:- Digital detection requires system synchronization
whereas the analog signals generally have no such requirement.
For the transmission of voice signals the channel provides flat amplitude
response. But for thetransmission of data and image transmissions, since the
phase delay variations are important an equalizer is used to maintain the flat
amplitude response and a linear phase response over the required frequency band.
Transmission rates upto16.8 kilobits per second have been achieved over the
telephone lines.
Coaxial Cable: The coaxial cable consists of a single wire conductor centered
inside an outer conductor, which is insulated from each other by a dielectric. The
main advantages of the coaxial cable are wide bandwidth and low
external
interference. But closely spaced repeaters are required. With repeaters spaced at
1km intervals the data rates of 274 megabits per second have been achieved.
Optical Fibers: An optical fiber consists of a very fine inner core made of silica
glass, surrounded by a concentric layer called cladding that is also made of glass.
The refractive index of the glass in the core is slightly higher than refractive index
of the glass in the cladding. Hence if a ray of light is launched into an optical fiber
at the right oblique acceptance angle, it is continually refracted into the core by
the cladding. That means the difference between the refractive indices of the core
and cladding helps guide the propagation of the ray of light inside the core of the
fiber from one end to the other.
Compared to coaxial cables, optical fibers are smaller in size and they offer
higher transmission bandwidths and longer repeater separations.
Microwave radio: A microwave radio, operating on the line-of-sight link, consists basically of a trans
30 GHz.
Bandwidth:
Bandwidth is simply a measure of frequency range. The range of frequencies
contained in a composite signal is its bandwidth. The bandwidth is normally a
difference between two numbers. For example, if a composite signal contains
frequencies between 1000 and 5000, its bandwidth is 5000 - or 4000. If a range of
2.40 GHz to 2.48 GHz is used by a device, then the bandwidth would be 0.08
GHz (or more commonly stated as 80MHz).It is easy to see that the bandwidth we
define here is closely related to the amount of data you can transmit within it - the
more room in frequency space, the more data you can fit in at a given moment.
The term bandwidth is often used for something we should rather call a data rate,
as in my Internet connection has 1 Mbps of bandwidth, meaning it can
transmit data at 1
Sampling
A message signal may originate from a digital or analog source. If the message signal is analog in n
Sampling operation is performed in accordance with the sampling theorem.
Part - I If a signal x(t) does not contain any frequency component beyond W Hz,
then the signal is completely described by its instantaneous uniform samples with
sampling interval (or period ) of Ts< 1/(2W) sec.
Part II The signal x(t) can be accurately reconstructed (recovered) from the set
of uniform instantaneous samples by passing the samples sequentially through an
ideal (brick-wall) lowpass filter with bandwidth B, where W B < fs W and fs
= 1/(Ts).
As the samples are generated at equal (same) interval (Ts) of time, the process of
sampling is called uniform sampling. Uniform sampling, as compared to any non-
uniform sampling, is more extensively used in time-invariant systems as the
theory of uniform sampling (either instantaneous or otherwise) is well developed
and the techniques are easier to implement in practical systems.
Conceptually, one may think that the continuous-time signal x(t) is multiplied by
an (ideal) impulse train to obtain {x(nTs)} as in equation(1) can be rewritten as,
If Xs(f) denotes the Fourier transform of the energy signal xs(t), we can write
using Eq. (1.2.4) and the convolution property:
+
= fs. nfs )d = fs. X().(f- nfs-)d = fs. X(f- nfs)
X(). (f .
(5)
[By sifting property of (t) and considering (f) as an even function, i.e. (f) = (-
f)]
Now, Part I of the sampling theorem is about the condition fs > 2.W i.e. (fs W) >
W and ( fs + W) < W. As seen from Fig. 1.3, when this condition is satisfied, the spectra of xs(t),
of x(t) is present in xs(t) without any distortion. This implies that xs(t), the
appropriately sampled version of x(t), contains all information about x(t) and
thus represents x(t).
The second part of Nyquists theorem suggests a method of recovering x(t) from
its sampled version xs(t) by using an ideal lowpass filter. As indicated by dotted
lines in Fig. 1.3, an ideal lowpass filter (with brick-wall type response) with a
bandwidth W
B < (fs W), when fed with xs(t), will allow the portion of Xs(f), centered at f
= 0 and will reject all its replicas at f = n fs, for n 0. This implies that the shape
of the continuous-time signal xs(t), will be retained at the output of the ideal
filter.
Hartley Shannon Law
The theory behind designing and analyzing channel codes is called Shannons
noisy channel coding theorem. It puts an upper limit on the amount of information
you can send in a noisy channel using a perfect channel code. This is given by the
following equation:
where C is the upper bound on the capacity of the channel (bit/s), B is the bandwidth
of the channel (Hz) and SNR is the Signal-to-N ise ratio (unitless).
Bandwidth-S/N Tradeof
The expression of the channel capacity of the Gaussian channel makes intuitive sense:
Thus we may trade off bandwidth for SNR. For example, if S/N = 7 and B =
4kHz, then the channel capacity is C = 12 10 3 bits/s. If the SNR increases to S/N
= 15 and B is decreased to 3kHz, the channel capacity remains the same.
However, as B tends to 1, the channel capacity does not become infinite since,
with an increase in bandwidth, the noise power also increases. If the noise power
spectral density is /2, then the total noise power is N = B, so the Shannon-
Hartley law becomes
Pulse Code Modulation
Introduction
In the simplest model of a telephone speech communication there is a direct, dedicated, physical c
In Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM), the unmodified electrical signal is not sent on to the connect
Because each sample is very short (~4s) there is a lot of time between samples
(~121s). Samples from other conversations are put into this spare time.
Usually the samples from 32 separate conversations are put on to a single line.
This process is called Time Division Multiplexing (TDM).
Note that the process of PAM and PCM (but without the use of TDM) is
essentially used to store music and speech on CDs, but with a higher sample rate,
more bits per sample and complex error correction mechanisms.
A n a lo
PCM
gue P a ra lle l to S e rDiaigl ita l P u ls e
A to D B in a C o n v e r te r G e n e ra to r u tp u t
O
In p uS a m p le r C o n v e r te r
ry C o
t
der
D e m o d u la to r
P C M S e r ia l to P a ra lle l A n a lo g u e
In p uCt o n v e r te r D to A
C o n v e r te r O u tpt
LPF
PCM is a true digital process as compared to PAM. In PCM the speech signal is
converted from analogue to digital form.
PCM is standardised for telephony by the ITU-T (International Telecommunications Union - Telecoms
frequency response of the handset microphone has a sharp roll-off from 3.4 kHz.
In quantization the levels are assigned a binary codeword. All sample values
falling between two quantization levels are considered to be located at the centre
of the quantization interval. In this manner the quantization process introduces a
certain amount of error or distortion into the signal samples. This error known as
quantization noise, is minimised by establishing a large number of small
quantization intervals. Of course, as the number ofquantization intervals increase,
so must the number or bits increase to uniquely identify the quantization intervals.
For example, if an analogue voltage level is to be converted to a digital system
with 8 discrete levels or quantization steps three bits are required. In the ITU-T
version there are 256 quantization steps, 128 positive and 128 negative, requiring
8 bits. A positive level is represented by having bit 8 (MSB) at 0, and for a
negative level the MSB is 1.
Quantization
Assume that a signal with power Psis to be quantized using a quantizer with L =
2n levels ranging in voltage from mp tomp as shown in the fig. 2.2
v
0T Ts 3 Ts 4 Ts 5 Ts
s 2
L = 2n
L levels t
0
n bits
mp
Q uantizer Input Sam ples x
Q uantizer O utput Sam ples x q
Fig. 2.2
We can define the variable v to be the height of the each of the L levels of the
quantizer as shown above. This gives a value of v equal to
2m
v
p
.
L
Therefore, for a set of quantizers with the same mp, the larger the number of levels
of a quantizer, the smaller the size of each quantization interval, and for a set of
quantizers with the same number of quantization intervals, the larger mp is the
larger the quantization interval length to accommodate all the quantization range.
Quan
tizer
Outp
ut xq
x
xq
v/2
v/2
v/2
Quantizer
v/2
Input x
v v v
v v v v v v
/2
v/2
v/2
v/2
mp
Fig. .2.3
Now let us define the quantization error represented by the difference between the
input sample and the corresponding output sample to be q, or
q x
x q.
Plotting this quantization error versus the input signal of a quantizer is seen next.
Notice that the plot of the quantization error is obtained by taking the difference
between the blow and red lines in the above Fig. 2.3
Quantization Error q
v/2
Quantizer
v/2 v v v Input x
v v v v v
mp
Fig. 2.4
It is seen from the Fig 2.4 that the quantization error of any sample is restricted
between v/2 andv/2 except when the input signal exceeds the range of
quantization of mp to mp.
= 2 mp / L
Fig. 2.5
Companding
-High amplitude analog signals are compressed prior to txn. and then expanded in
the receiver
-Higher amplitude analog signals are compressed and Dynamic range is improved
-Early PCM systems used analog companding, where as modern systems use
digital companding.
Analog companding
2.7 PCM system with analog companding
--In the transmitter, the dynamic range of the analog signal is compressed, and
then converted o a linear PCM code.
--In the receiver, the PCM code is converted to a PAM signal, filtered, and then
expanded back to its original dynamic range.
-- There are two methods of analog companding currently being used that closely
approximate a logarithmic function and are often called log-PCM codes.
2) A-law
-law companding
ln 1 inV
mV
ax V
max
V
ln 1
out
A-law companding
where y =
A | x| 1
, 0 | x | x = Vin
Vout y 1 log A /
A
Vmax 1 log( A | x |)
| x | 1
1
,
1 log A A
Digital Companding:
--With digital companding, the analog signal is first sampled and converted to a
linear PCM code, and then the linear code is digitally compressed.
-- In the receiver, the compressed PCM code is expanded and then decoded back
to analog.
-- The most recent digitally compressed PCM systems use a 12- bit linear PCM
code and an 8-bit compressed PCM code.
%erro
12-bit
the signed bit is 1. The remaining 7 bits are used to code the sample value. The
ITU- T define a look up table which allocates a particular binary code to each
quantified A-law value.
The line coding which is used assigns opposite polarities to successive 1s. This
eliminates any DC voltage on the line, and reduces the inter symbol interference
if adjacent bits are 1. If there is silence on the PCM channel then the measured
samples will be 0 Vrms and the output of the DAC will be 1000 0000. A stream of
all zeros is not desirable on an active channel because
In AMI positive and negative pulses (of equal amplitude) are used for alternative
symbols 1. No pulse is used for symbol 0. In either case the pulse returns to 0
before the end of the bit interval. This eliminates any DC on the line.
HDB3 encoding rules follow those for AMI, except that a sequence of four
consecutive 0's are encoded using a special "violation" bit. The 4 th 0 bit is given
the same polarity as the last 1-bit which was sent using the AMI encoding rule.
This prevents long runs of 0's in the data stream which may otherwise prevent a
receiver from tracking the centre of each bit. By introducing violations, extra
"edges" are introduced, enabling a Digital PLL to reliably reconstruct the clock
signal at the receiver. The HDB3 is transparent to the sequence of bits being
transmitted (i.e. whatever data is sent, the Digital PLL can reconstruct the data
and extract the bits at the receiver).
B BBBBBBB
1010 1010 = + 0 - 0 + 0 - 0
B 0 B 0 B 0 B 0
1000 0001 + 0 0 0 + 0 0 -
= B 0 0 0 V 00B
1000 0110 = + 0 0 0 + - +0
= B 0 0 0 V BB0
PCM Timing and Synchronisation
The PCM receiver must be able to identify the start and finish of each full
sampling sequence and to identify each bit position. The sampling clock needs to
be either sent to, or regenerated at, the receiving side to determine when each full
sequence of sampling begins and ends. The data clock is also needed to determine
exactly when to read each bit of information.
d a ta c lo c k 6 4 k b i t / s
15.625 s
fra m e c lo c k 125
A PCM channel is sampled at 8,000 Hz or
s
once every 125 s. If there is one channel or
30 TDM channels the sampling period is
fixed at 125 s and this period is known as a
frame.
B1 B2
1 0
B3 B4 B5 B6 B7 B8 B1 Therefore the frame clock must have a
1 0 0 1 1 1 ?
period of 125 s. The rising edge of the
frame clock
Fig. 2.9 informs the receiver that the next bit will be
Bit 1 of a new sample. The falling edge of
the
data clock informs the receiver that it must read the data bit.
When the bit stream is transmitted along a line the pulses become distorted and
the rise and fall times become significant. Ideally, a 1 will be high for 15.625
s. In practice the pulse may only be above the high threshold for a few s so it
is very important that the bit is read within a certain time limit of the clock pulse.
The simplest way to synchronise a PCM sender to a PCM receiver is to send the
clock signals on different circuits to the data This would be done in a self-
contained system such as private branch exchange (PBX). Telephony is full
duplex so that there is a coder and a decoder at each port, but each would use the
same clock.
g ra n u la r n
1 1 0
compared with the previous sample.
0 0
1
The result of the comparison is
0 0 0
quantified using a one bit coder. If the
0
sample is greater than the previous
sample a 1 is generated. Otherwise a 0
is generated.
The advantage of delta modulation
over
PCM is its simplicity and lower cost. But the noise performance is not as
Fig. 2.10
good as PCM.
To reconstruct the original from the quantization, if a 1 is received the signal is increased by a step
dx(t)/dt q /T = q * fs
where: x(t) = input signal, q = step size, T = period between samples, fs = sampling frequency
Assume that the input signal has maximum amplitude A and maximum frequency
F. The most rapidly changing input is provided by x(t) = A * sin (2 * * F * t).
For this dx(t)/dt = 2 * * F * A * sin (2 * * F *
t). This slope has a maximum value of 2 * * F * A
Overload occurs if 2 * * F * A> q
* fs To prevent overload we require q * fs> 2 * * F
*A
Example A = 2 V, F = 3.4 kHz, and the signal is sampled 1,000,000 times
per second, requires q > 2 * 3.14 * 3,400 * 2 /1,000,000 V > 42.7 mV
Granular noise occurs if the slope changes more slowly than the step size. The
reconstructed signal oscillates by 1 step size in every sample. It can be reduced by
decreasing the step size. This requires that the sample rate be increased. Delta
Modulation requires a sampling rate much higher than twice the bandwidth. It
requires oversampling in order to obtain an accurate prediction of the next input,
since each encoded sample contains a relatively small amount of information.
Delta Modulation requires higher sampling rates than PCM.
D iffe re n t ia Encod
A n a lo g to r Q u a n t is e d D iffe
B a n d L im itin
u e In erEnod re n c e S a
g F i l te r
put er m p le s
+
- ADC
Acc um
u la to r D
AC
Fig. 2.11
The principle of ADPCM is to use our knowledge of the signal in the past time to
predict the signal one sample period later, in the future. The predicted signal is
then compared with the actual signal. The difference between these is the signal
which is sent to line - it is the error in the prediction. However this is not
done by making
comparisons on the incoming audio signal - the comparisons are done after PCM
coding.
The ADPCM word represents the prediction error of the signal, and has no
significance itself. Instead the decoder must be able to predict the voltage of the
recovered signal from the previous samples received, and then determine the
actual value of the recovered signal from this prediction and the error signal, and
then to reconstruct the original waveform.
ADPCM is sometimes used by telecom operators to fit two speech channels onto a
single 64 kbit/s link. This was very common for transatlantic phone calls via satellite up until a few
Delta modulation, like DPCM is a predictive waveform coding technique and can
be considered as a special case of DPCM. It uses the simplest possible quantizer,
namely a two level (one bit) quantizer. The price paid for achieving the simplicity
of the quantizer is the increased sampling rate (much higher than the Nyquist rate)
and the possibility of slope-overload distortion in the waveform reconstruction, as
explained in greater detail later on in this section.
In DM, the analog signal is highly over-sampled in order to increase the adjacent
sample correlation. The implication of this is that there is very little change in two
adjacent samples, thereby enabling us to use a simple one bit quantizer, which like
in DPCM, acts on the difference (prediction error) signals.
In its original form, the DM coder approximates an input time function by a series
of linear segments of constant slope. Such a coder is therefore referred to as a
Linear (or non-adaptive) Delta Modulator (LDM). Subsequent developments have
resulted in delta modulators where the slope of the approximating function is a
variable. Such coders are generally classified under Adaptive Delta Modulation
(ADM) schemes. We use DM to indicate either of the linear or adaptive variety.
Deltamodulation principleofoperation
Deltamodulationwasintroducedinthe1940sasasimplifiedformofpulsecodemodul
atio n(PCM),whichrequiredadifficult-to-implementanalog-to-
digital(A/D)converter.
Theoutputofadeltamodulatorisabitstreamofsamples,atarelatively
highrate(eg,100kbit/sor
moreforaspeechbandwidthof4 kHz)thevalueofeachbitbeing
determinedaccordingas
towhethertheinputmessagesampleamplitudehasincreasedordecreasedrelativetoth
epr evioussample.Itisan exampleofdifferentialpulsecodemodulation(DPCM).
Blockdiagram
Theoperationofadeltamodulatoristoperiodicallysampletheinputmessage,tomak
eac omparisonofthecurrentsamplewiththatprecedingit,andtooutputasinglebit
isa delayedversionoftheinput,andsothecomparison
isineffectthatofthecurrentbitwiththepreviousbit,asrequiredbythedeltamodulatio
npri nciple.
Figure2.13illustratesthebasicsysteminblockdiagramform,andthiswillbethemod
ulat oryouwill bemodelling.
Thesystemisintheformofafeedbackloop.Thismeansthatitsoperationisnotn ecessaril
yobvious,anditsanalysisnon-
trivial.Butyoucanbuildit,andconfirmthatitdoesbehaveinthe manner
adelta
modulatorshould.
Thesystemisacontinuoustimetodiscretetimeconverter.Infact,itisaformofanalogt
odi gitalconverter,andis thestarting pointfrom which
more sophisticateddeltamodulatorscanbe
developed.
Thesamplerblockisclocked.Theoutputfromthesamplerisabipolarsignal,intheblockd
iagrambeingeither Vvolts.Thisisthedeltamodulatedsignal,thewaveformof
whichisshowninFigure 2.Itisfedback,inafeedbackloop,viaanintegrator,toasummer.
Theintegratoroutputisasawtooth-likewaveform,alsoillustratedinFigure
Figure 2.15:integrator output superimposed on the messagewith the delta modulated signal below
Thesawtoothwaveformissubtractedfromthemessage,alsoconnectedtothesum
mer, andthe difference-anerror signal-isthe signalappearingatthe
summeroutput.
Anamplifierisshowninthefeedbackloop..Thiscontrolstheloopgain.Inpracticeitma
ybe
aseparateamplifier,partoftheintegrator,orwithinthesummer.Itisusedotonctrolthe
size
oftheteethofthesawtoothwaveform,inconjunctionwiththeintegratortimeconsta
nt.
WhenanalysingtheblockdiagramofFigure
2.13itisconvenienttothinkofthesummerhavingunitygainbetweenbothinputsandth
eou tput.Themessagecomes in
at
afixedamplitude.Thesignalfromtheintegrator,whichisasawtoothapproximationto
the message,isadjustedwiththeamplifiertomatchitasclosely aspossible.
stepsizecalculation
InthedeltamodulatorofFigure2.13theoutputoftheintegratorisasawtooth-
likeapproximationtotheinputmessage.Theteethofthesaw
mustbeabletorise(orfall)fastenoughtofollowthemessage.Thustheintegratortimec
ons tantisanimportantparameter.
Foragivensampling(clock)ratethestepslope(volt/s)determinesthesize(volts)ofth
este p withinthesamplinginterval.
Supposetheamplitudeof
therectangularwavefromthesamplerisV volt.Forachangeofinputsampleto
theintegratorfrom(say)negativeto
positive,thechangeofintegrator output will be,
afteraclockperiodT:
slopeoverloadandgranularity
ThebinarywaveformillustratedinFigure2.15isthesignaltransmitted.Thisisthedelt
amo dulatedsignal.
Theintegralofthebinarywaveformisthesawtoothapproximationto themessage.
IntheexperimententitledDeltademodulation(inthisVolume)youwillseethatthissa
wto othwave istheprimaryoutputfromthedemodulatoratthereceiver.
Lowpassfilteringofthesawtooth(fromthedemodulator)givesabetterapproximatio
ntot
hemessage.Buttherewillbeaccompanyingnoiseanddistortion,productsoftheappr
oxi mationprocessatthemodulator.
Theunwantedproductsofthemodulationprocess,observedatthereceiver,areof
two kinds.Thesearedue toslopeoverload, and granularity.
slopeoverload
Thisoccurswhenthesawtoothapproximationcannotkeepupwiththerate
-of- changeoftheinput signalinthe regionsofgreatestslope.
Thestepsizeisreasonableforthosesectionsofthesampledwaveformofsmallslope,
butt heapproximationispoorelsewhere.Thisisslopeoverload,duetotoosmalla
step.
Slopeoverloadisillustrated inFigure2.16.
slo p e o v e rlo a d
Figure2.16:slopeoverload
Toreducethepossibilityofslopeoverloadthestepsizecanbeincreased(forthesamesa
mp ling rate).This isillustratedin
Figure
2.17.Thesawtoothisbetterabletomatchthemessageinthe regionsofsteep slope.
An
alternativemethodofslopeoverloadreductionis
toincreasethesamplingrate.ThisisillustratedinFigure
2.18,wheretheratehasbeenincreasedbyafactorof2.4times, but thestep isthe same
size asinFigure2.15.
tim e
1.4 Granularnoise
ReferbacktoFigure 2.16.Thesawtoothfollowsthemessagebeingsampledquitewellintheregionsofsmalls
Thedegradationshowsup,a
ty.
1.5 noiseanddistort
Thereisaconflictbetweentherequirementsforminimizationofslopeoverloadandthe
gra
nularnoise.Theonerequiresanincreasedstepsize,theotherareducedstepsize.You
shouldrefertoyourtextbook
formorediscussion
ofwaysandmeansofreachingacompromise.Youwillmeetanexampleintheexperime
nte
ntitledAdaptivedeltamodulation(inthisVolume).Anoptimumstepcanbedetermine
dby minimizingthequantizingerroratthesummer output, or
thedistortionatthe
demodulatoroutput.
Then this situation will produce the occurrence of slope overload and cause signal
distortion. However, the adaptive delta modulation (ADM) is the modification of
delta modulation to improve the disadvantage of the occurrence of slope overload.
Figure 2.20 is the block diagram of ADM modulator. In figure 2.20, we can see
that the delta modulator is comprised by comparator, sampler and integrator, then
the slope controller and the level detect algorithm comprise a quantization level
adjuster, which can control the gain of the integrator in the delta modulator. ADM
modulator is the modification of delta modulator, therefore, due to the delta
modulator has the problem of slope overload at low and high frequencies. The
reason is the magnitude of the (t) of delta modulator is fixed, i.e. the increment
of or - is unable to follow the variation of the slope of the input signal. When
the variation of the slope of the input signal is large, the magnitude of (t) still
can increase by following the variation, then this situation will not occur the
problem of slope overload. On the other hand, there is another technique, which is
known as continuous variable slope delta (CVSD) modulation. This technique is
commonly used in Bluetooth application. CVSD modulator is also the
modification of delta modulator, use to improve the occurrence of slope overload.
The different between the CVSD and ADM modulators are the quantization level
adjuster A. ADM modulator is discrete values and the quantization level adjuster
of CVSD modulator is continuous. Simply, the quantization value of ADM
modulator is the variation of digital, such as the quantization values of +1, +2, +3,
-2, -3 and so on. As for CVSD modulator, the quantization value is the variation
of analog, such as the quantization values of +1,
+1.1, +1.2, -1.5, -0.3, -0.9 and so on.
Fig. 2.20 The Operation Theory of ADM Modulation
UNIT - II
Tb
S 2(t) 2Eb Cos2f 2t for symbol 0
Tb
3. PSK[Phase Shift Keying]:
In a binary PSK system the pair of signals S1(t) and S2(t) are
used to represent binary symbol 1 and 0 respectively.
S1 (t) 2Eb Cos2fc t --------- for Symbol 1
Tb
2Eb 2Eb
S2 (t) Cos(2fc t ) Cos2fc t ------- for Symbol 0
Tb Tb
Non Return to
Zero Level Product
Encoder Modulator
Binary Binary PSK Signal
Data Sequence
(t) 2 Cos2f t
1 c
Tb
Tb
x(t) dt x1 Decision Device Choose 1 if x1>0
0
Choose 0 if x1<0
Correlator
1 (t) Threshold = 0
In a Coherent binary PSK system the pair of signals S1(t) and S2(t) are used
to represent binary symbol 1 and 0 respectively.
2Eb
S1 (t) Cos2fc t --------- for Symbol 1
Tb
2Eb 2Eb
S2 (t) Cos(2fc t ) Cos2fc t ------- for Symbol 0
Tb Tb
E E
b0 b1
Where Eb= Average energy transmitted per bit Eb
2
In the case PSK, there is only one basic function of Unit energy which is given
by
(t) 2 Cos2f t 0tT
1
T c b
b
Tb
Eb
S11 S1 (t)1 (t) dt
0
Tb
Eb &respectively.
E
b This signal transmission encoding is performed by a NRZ
level encoder.The resulting binary wave [in polar form] and a sinusoidal carrier 1 (t)
nc
[whose frequency] fare
c applied to a product modulator. The desired BPSK wave
Tb
(a)
(b)
Fig. 3.4: (a) FSK transmitter (
A binary FSK Transmitter is as shown in fig. (a). The incoming binary data
sequence is applied to on-off level encoder. The output of encoder is Eb volts for symbol 1 and 0 vo
switched on with oscillator frequency f1, for symbol 0, because of inverter the lower
channel is switched on with oscillator frequency f2. These two frequencies are combined using an a
The detector consists of two correlators. The incoming noisy BFSK signal x(t) is
common to both correlator. The Coherent reference signal 1 (t) and 2 (t) are supplied
Tb
dt Decision Device
x(t) X 0 If x > choose symbol 1
(t) 2 Cos2f t0 t T
1 e b
Tb
The transmitted signals S1(t) and S2(t) are given by
S1 (t) Eb 1 (t) for Symbol 1
The BASK system has one dimensional signal space with two messages (N=1,
M=2)
Region E2 Region E1
Message
Point 2
Eb
1 (t)
E
0 b
Message
2 Point 1
Fig. 3.7 Signal Space representation of BASK signal
In transmitter the binary data sequence is given to an on-off encoder. Which gives
an
output Eb volts for symbol 1 and 0 volt for symbol 0. The resulting binary wave [in unipolar
form] and sinusoidal carrier 1 (t) are applied to a product modulator. The desired BASK wave is ob
In demodulator, the received noisy BASK signal x(t) is apply to correlator with coher
reference signal 1 (t) as shown in fig. (b). The correlator output x is compared with
If x > the receiver decides in favour of symbol 1. If x < the receiver decides in fa
Incoherent detection:
If Z(t) the sampled value is less than threshold ( ) a decision will be made in favour
of
symbol 0.
Fig. 3.9 shows the block diagram of incoherent type FSK demodulator. The detector
consists of two band pass filters one tuned to each of the two frequencies used to
communicate 0s and 1s., The output of filter is envelope detected and then baseband detected u
sinusoids is stronger at the receiver. If we take the difference of the outputs of the two envelope
detectors the result is bipolar baseband.
The resulting envelope detector outputs are sampled at t = kTb and their values are
compared with the threshold and a decision will be made infavour of symbol 1 or 0.
Hence the name differential phase shift keying [DPSK]. To send symbol 0
0
we phase advance the current signal waveform by 180 and to send symbol 1 we
leave the phase of the current signal waveform unchanged.
The differential encoding process at the transmitter input starts with an
arbitrary first but, securing as reference and thereafter the differentially encoded
sequence{dk} is generated by using the logical equation.
d k d k 1 bk d k 1 bk
Where bk is the input binary digit at time kTb and dk-1 is the previous value of
the
differentially encoded digit. Table illustrate the logical operation involved in the
generation of DPSK signal.
A DPSK demodulator is as shown in fig(b). The received signal is first passed through a BPF centere
to the cosine of the difference between the carrier phase angles in the two correlator
inputs. The correlator output is finally compared with threshold of 0 volts . If correlator output is +
COHERENT QUADRIPHASE SHIFT KEYING
2
1 (t) T cos 2 fc
t
0 t T
2
t
b
2(t) T b sin 2 f c 0 t T
There are four message points and the associated signal vectors are defined by
E cos
2i 1
Si
4 i 1,2,3,4
E sin 2i
4
The table shows the elements of signal vectors, namely Si1 & Si2
Table:-
Input dibit Phase of Coordinates of message
QPSK points
signal(radians) Si1 Si2
10 E E
4 2 2
00 3 E E
4 2 2
01 5 E E
4 2 2
11 7 E E
4 2 2
Unit III
Receiving Filter:
Correlative receiver
For an AWGN channel and for the case when the transmitted signals are
equally likely, the optimum receiver consists of two subsystems
MATCHED FILTER
Science each of the orthonormal basic functions are 1(t) ,2(t) .M(t) is
assumed to be zero outside the interval 0<t<T. we can design a linear filter with
impulse response hj(t), with the received signal x(t) the fitter output is given by
the convolution integral
yj(t) = xj
The spectrum of the output signal of a matched filter with the matched signal as inpu
PROPERTY 2
PROPERTY 3
The output Signal to Noise Ratio of a Matched filter depends only on the ratio
of the signal energy to the power spectral density of the white noise at the filter
input.
PROPERTY 4
The Matched Filtering operation may be separated into two matching
conditions; namely spectral phase matching that produces the desired output
peak at time T, and the spectral amplitude matching that gives this peak value its
optimum signal to noise density ratio.
EYE PATTERN
The quality of digital transmission systems are evaluated using the bit
error rate. Degradation of quality occurs in each process modulation,
transmission, and detection. The eye pattern is experimental method that
contains all the information concerning the degradation of quality. Therefore,
careful analysis of the eye pattern is important in analyzing the degradation
mechanism.
The sensitivity of the system to timing error is determined by the rate of closure
of the eye as the sampling time is varied.
where 0 log(0) = 0. The base of the logarithm is generally 2. When this is the case, the units
of entropy are bits.
There are other possibilities besides being completely random and completely deter-mined.
Imagine a weighted coin, such that heads occurr 75% of the time. The entropy would be:
0.75log0.75 + 0.25log0.25= 0.8113. After 100 trials, Id only need a message of about 82 bits
on average to describe the sample. Shannon showed that there exists a coder that can construct
messages of length H(X)+1, nearly matching this ideal rate.
Just as with probabilities, we can compute joint and conditional entropies. Joint
entropy is the randomness contained in two variables, while conditional entropy is a measure
of the randomness of one variable given knowledge of another. Joint entropy is defined as:
while the conditional entropy is:
There are several interesting facts that follow from these definitions. For example, two
random variables, X and Y, are considered independent if and only if HY| X=
HY
or HXY= HX+HY It is also the case that HY|XHY (knowing more information
can never increase our uncertainty). Similarly, HXYHX+HY It is alsothe case that
HXY=HY|X+HX=HX Y+HY These relations hold in thegeneral case of more than
two variables.
There are several facts about discrete entropy, H(), that do not hold for continuous
ordifferential entropy, h(). The most important is that while H X 0 h() can actually be negative.
of randomness, it is still that case that if h X h Y then X has more randomness than Y.
Mut
Although co
not an adeq
us a great deal about Y or that H(Y) is small to begin with. Thus, we measure dependence
using mutual information:
IXY= HYHY|X
KL divergence measures the difference between two distributions. It is sometimes called the
relative entropy. It is always non-negative and zero only when p=q; however, it is not a
distance because it is not symmetic.
In other words, mutual information is a measure of the difference between the joint
probability and product of the individual probabilities. These two distributions are equivalent
only when X and Y are independent, and diverge as X and Y become more dependent.
Shannon-Fano Code
ShannonFano coding, named after Claude Elwood Shannon and Robert Fano, is a technique
for constructing a prefix code based on a set of symbols and their probabilities. It is
suboptimal in the sense that it does not achieve the lowest possible expected codeword length
like Huffman coding; however unlike Huffman coding, it does guarantee that all codeword
lengths are within one bit of their theoretical ideal I(x) =log P(x).
In ShannonFano coding, the symbols are arranged in order from most probable to least
probable, and then divided into two sets whose total probabilities are as close as possible to
being equal. All symbols then have the first digits of their codes assigned; symbols in the first
set receive "0" and symbols in the second set receive "1". As long as any sets with more than
one member remain, the same process is repeated on those sets, to determine successive
digits of their codes. When a set has been reduced to one symbol, of course, this means the
symbol's code is complete and will not form the prefix of any other symbol's code.
The algorithm works, and it produces fairly efficient variable-length encodings; when the two
smaller sets produced by a partitioning are in fact of equal probability, the one bit of
information used to distinguish them is used most efficiently. Unfortunately, ShannonFano
does not always produce optimal prefix codes.
For this reason, ShannonFano is almost never used; Huffman coding is almost as
computationally simple and produces prefix codes that always achieve the lowest expected code w
performance and minimum requirements for programming.
Sha
A Shannon
code table
For
counts so that each symbols relative frequency of occurrence is known.
Sort the lists of symbols according to frequency, with the most frequently occurring
symbols at the left and the least common at the right.
Divide the list into two parts, with the total frequency counts of the left part being as
close to the total of the right as possible.
The left part of the list is assigned the binary digit 0, and the right part is assigned the
digit 1. This means that the codes for the symbols in the first part will all start with 0,
and the codes in the second part will all start with 1.
Recursively apply the steps 3 and 4 to each of the two halves, subdividing groups and
adding bits to the codes until each symbol has become a corresponding code leaf on the tree.
Example:
The source of information A generates the symbols {A0, A1, A2, A3 and A4} with the
corresponding probabilities {0.4, 0.3, 0.15, 0.1 and 0.05}. Encoding the source symbols using
binary encoder and Shannon-Fano encoder gives:
A DMS is a source whose output is a sequence of letters such that each letter is
.ak. The letters in the source output sequence are assumed to be random and
statistically
independent of each other. A fixed probability assignment for the occurrence of
each
letter is also assumed. Let us, consider a small example to appreciate the importance of
probability assignment of the source letters.
P(a2)=0.25, P(a3)= 0.13, P(a4)=0.12. Let us decide to go for binary coding of these four
source letters. While this can be done in multiple ways, two encoded representations are shown be
the second method only a1 has been encoded in one bit, a2 in two bits and the
remaining two in three bits. It is easy to see that the average number of bits to be used
per source letter for the two methods are not the same. ( a for method #1=2 bits per
letter and a for
method #2 < 2 bits per letter). So, if we consider the issue of encoding a long sequence of
letters we have to transmit less number of bits following the second method. This is
an important aspect of source coding operation in general. At this point, let us note the
following:
a) We observe that assignment of small number of bits to more probable letters and
assignment of larger number of bits to less probable letters (or symbols) may lead to
efficient source encoding scheme.
b) However, one has to take additional care while transmitting the encoded letters. A
careful inspection of the binary representation of the symbols in method #2 reveals
that it may lead to confusion (at the decoder end) in deciding the end of binary
representation of a letter and beginning of the subsequent letter.
The average number of coded bits (or letters in general) required per source letter is as
small as possible and
The source letters can be fully retrieved from a received encodedsequence.
In the following we discuss a popular variable-length source-coding scheme satisfying the above tw
probabilities P(a 1), P(a2),. P(aK). Each source letter is to be encoded into a
codeword made of elements (or letters) drawn from a code alphabet containing D
symbols. Often for ease of implementation a binary code alphabet (D = 2) is chosen.
As
we observed earlier in an example, different codeword may not have same number of
code symbols. If nk denotes the number of code symbols corresponding to the source
letter ak , the average number of code letters per source letter ( n ) is:
Example: consider the following table and find out which code out of the four shown is
/are prefix condition code. Also determine n for each code.
In Binary Huffman Coding each source letter is converted into a binary code
word. It is a prefix condition code ensuring minimum average length per source letter in bits.
Let the source letters a1, a 2, .aK have probabilities P(a1), P(a2),.
P(aK) and let us assume that P(a1) P(a2) P(a 3). P(aK).
We now consider a simple example to illustrate the steps for Huffman coding.
Arrange the letters in descending order of their probability (here they are
arranged).
Consider the last two probabilities. Tie up the last two probabilities. Assign,
say, 0 to the last digit of representation for the least probable letter (a6) and
1 to the
last digit of representation for the second least probable letter (a5). That is,
P(a5)=0.1
2 0.2
P(a6)=0.08 0
(3) Now, add the two probabilities and imagine a new letter, say b1, substituting
for
a6 and a5. So P(b1) =0.2. Check whether a4 and b1are the least likely letters. If
not, reorder the letters as per Step#1 and add the probabilities of two least
letters.likely
For our example, it leads to:
P(a1)=0.3, P(a2)=0.2, P(b1)=0.2, P(a3)=0.15 and P(a4)=0.15
(4) Now go to Step#2 and start with the reduced ensemble consisting of a1 , a2 , a3 ,
P(a3)=0.15 1
0.3
0
P(a4)=0.15
t Continue till the first digits of the most reduced ensemble of two letters are
assigned a 1 and a 0.
P(a2)=0.2
0.4
P(b1)=0.2
So, P(b3)=0.4. Following Step#2 again, we get, P(b3)=0.4, P(a1)=0.3 and
P(b2)=0.3.
P(a1)=0.3
0.6
P(b2)=0.3 0
P(b4)=0.6 1
1.00
P(b3)=0.4
0
6. Now, read the code tree inward, starting from the root, and construct the
codewords. The first digit of a codeword appears first while reading the code
tree inward.
Hence, the final representation is: a1=11, a2=01, a3=101, a4=100, a5=001, a6=000.
4. Note that the entropy of the source is: H(X)=2.465 bits/symbol. Average length
per source letter after Huffman coding is a little bit more but close to the source
entropy. In fact, the following celebrated theorem due to C. E. Shannon sets the limiting value of av
CONVOLUTIONAL CODES
Convolutional codes are commonly described using two parameters: the code
rate and the constraint length. The code rate, k/n, is expressed as a ratio of the number
of bits into the convolutional encoder (k) to the number of channel symbols output by
the convolutional encoder (n) in a given encoder cycle. The constraint length
parameter, K, denotes the "length" of the convolutional encoder, i.e. how many k-bit
stages are available to feed the combinatorial logic that produces the output symbols.
Closely related to K is the parameter m, which indicates how many encoder cycles an
input bit is retained and used for encoding after it first appears at the input to the
convolutional encoder. The m parameter can be thought of as the memory length of
the encoder.
Fig. 7.2 State diagram representation for the encoder in Fig. 7.1
b) Tree Diagram Representation
The tree diagram representation shows all possible information and encoded
sequences for the convolutional encoder. Fig. 7.3 shows the tree diagram for the
encoder in Fig. 7.1. The encoded bits are labeled on the branches of the tree. Given an
input sequence, the encoded sequence can be directly read from the tree. As an
example, an input sequence (1011) results in the encoded sequence (11, 10, 00, 01).
c) Trellis Diagram Representation
The trellis diagram of a convolutional code is obtained from its state diagram.
All state transitions at each time step are explicitly shown in the diagram to retain the
time dimension, as is present in the corresponding tree diagram. Usually, supporting
descriptions on state transitions, corresponding input and output bits etc. are labeled in
the trellis diagram. It is interesting to note that the trellis diagram, which describes the
operation of the encoder, is very convenient for describing the behavior of
thecorresponding decoder, especially when the famous Viterbi Algorithm (VA) is
followed. Figure 7.4 shows the trellis diagram for the encoder in Figure 7.1.
process, the accumulated path metric is updated by adding the metric of the
incoming branch with the accumulated path metric of the state from where the
branch originated. No decision about a received codeword is taken from such
operations and the decoding decision is deliberately delayed to reduce the possibility
of erroneous decision.
The basic operations which are carried out as per the hard-decision Viterbi
Algorithm after receiving one codeword are summarized below:
All the branch metrics of all the states are determined;
.
Accumulated metrics of all the paths (two in our example code) leading to a
state are calculated taking into consideration the accumulated path metrics of
the states from where the most recent branches emerged;
Only one of the paths, entering into a state, which has minimum accumulated
path metric is chosen as the survivor path for the state (or, equivalently
node);
So, at the end of this process, each state has one survivor path. The history
of a survivor path is also maintained by the node appropriately ( e.g. by storing
the codewords or the information bits which are associated with the branches
making the path);
(5) Steps a) to d) are repeated and decoding decision is delayed till sufficient number
of codewords has been received. Typically, the delay in decision making = Lx k codewords where L
codeword.
The above procedure is repeated for each received codeword hereafter. Thus, the decision for a cod
Introduction:
Initially developed for military applications during II world war, that was less sensitive to
intentional interference or jamming by third parties.
Spread spectrum technology has blossomed into one of the fundamental building blocks in
current and next-generation wireless systems
Solution
A spread spectrum system is therefore designed to make these tasks as difficult as possible.
Secondly, the signal should be difficult to disturb with a jamming signal, i.e.,
thetransmitted signal should possess an anti-jamming (AJ) property
Remedy
Spread the narrow band signal into a broad band to protect against interference
In a digital communication system the primary resources are Bandwidth andPower. The
study of digital communication system deals with efficient utilization ofthese two resources,
but there are situations where it is necessary to sacrifice their efficient utilization in order to
meet certain other design objectives.
For example to provide a form of secure communication (i.e. the transmitted signal is
not easily detected or recognized by unwanted listeners) the bandwidth of the transmitted
signal is increased in excess of the minimum bandwidth necessary to transmit it. This
requirement is catered by a technique known as Spread SpectrumModulation.
One of the basic concepts in data communication is the idea of allowing several
transmitters to send information simultaneously over a single communication channel. This
allows several users to share a bandwidth of frequencies. This concept is called multiplexing.
CDMA employs spread-spectrum technology and a special coding scheme (where each
transmitter is assigned a code) to allow multiple users to be multiplexed over the same
physical channel. By contrast, time division multiple access (TDMA) divides access by time,
while frequency-division multiple access (FDMA) divides it by frequency. CDMA is a form
of "spread-spectrum" signaling, since the modulated coded signal has a much higher data
bandwidth than the data being communicated.
Technical details
CDMA uses Direct Sequence spreading, where spreading process isdone by directly
combining the baseband information to high chip rate binary code. The Spreading Factor is
the ratio of the chips (UMTS = 3.84Mchips/s) to baseband information rate. Spreading
factors vary from 4 to 512 in FDD UMTS. Spreading process gain can in expressed in dBs
(Spreading factor 128 = 21dB gain).
Fig. 8.4
Each user in a CDMA system uses a different code to modulate their signal. Choosing
the codes used to modulate the signal is very important in the performance of CDMA
systems. The best performance will occur when there is good separation between the signal
of a desired user and the signals of other users. The separation of the signals is made by
correlating the received signal with the locally generated code of the desired user. If the
signal matches the desired user's code then the correlation function will be high and the
system can extract that signal. If the desired user's code has nothing in common with the
signal the correlation should be as close to zero as possible (thus eliminating the signal); this
is referred to as cross correlation. If the code is correlated with the signal at any time offset
other than zero, the correlation should be as close to zero as possible. This is referred to as
auto-correlation and is used to reject multi-path interference.
Fig. 8.5
PSUEDO-NOISE SEQUENCE:
Generation of PN sequence:
Clock
Shift Shift Shift Output
Register1 Register2 Register3
S0 S3
Logic Circuit
A feedback shift register is said to be Linear when the feed back logic consists of
entirely mod-2-address ( Ex-or gates). In such a case, the zero state is not permitted. The period of
Example1: Consider the linear feed back shift register as shown in fig 2involve
three flip-flops. The input so is equal to the mod-2 sum of S1 and S3. If the initial state of the shift re
100,110,011,011,101,010,001,100 . . . . . .
3
Which repeats itself with period 2 1 = 7 (n=3)
m
N = 2 -1
(7) Contents of required stages are modulo 2 added and fed back to input.
Fig. 8.8 Initial stages of Shift registers1000 Let initial status of shift register be 1000
1 0 0 0
0 1 0 0
0 0 1 0
1 0 0 1
1 1 0 0
0 1 1 0
1 0 1 1
0 1 0 1
1 0 1 0
1 1 0 1
1 1 1 0
1 1 1 1
0 1 1 1
0 0 1 1
0 0 0 1
1 0 0 0
We can see for shift Register of length m=4.
.At each clock the change in state of flip-flop is shown.
000100110101111
Properties of PN Sequence
Randomness of PN sequence is tested by following properties
u Balance property
v Run length property
w Autocorrelation property
1. Balance property
In each Period of the sequence , number of binary ones differ from binary zeros by
at most one digit .
Consider output of shift register 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 Seven
zeros and eight ones -meets balance condition.
Among the runs of ones and zeros in each period, it is desirable that about one half the runs
of each type are of length 1, one- fourth are of length 2 and one-eighth are of length 3 and so-
on.
0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 01 1 1 1
3 1 2 2 1 1 1 4
Yields PN autocorrelation as
Range of PN Sequence Lengths
7 127
8 255
9 511
10 1023
11 2047
12 4095
13 8191
17 131071
19 524287
A Notion of Spread Spectrum:
dt
0
<----Tran
{ cK } denotes a PN sequence.
The desired modulation is achieved by applying the data signal b(t) and PN signal c(t) to a product
For base band transmission, the product signal m(t) represents the transmitted
The received signal r(t) consists of the transmitted signal m(t) plus an additive
interference noise n(t), Hence
= c(t).b(t) + n(t)
+1
-1
+1
0 -1
+1
0 -1
To recover the original message signal b(t), the received signal r(t) is applied to a
demodulator that consists of a multiplier followed by an integrator and a decision device. The
multiplier is supplied with a locally generated PN sequence that is exact replica of that used
in the transmitter. The multiplier output is given by
Z(t) = r(t).c(t)
2
5.c (t).b(t) + c(t).n(t)
The data signal b(t) is multiplied twice by the PN signal c(t), where as unwanted signal
2
n(t) is multiplied only once. But c (t) = 1, hence the above equation reduces to
Now the data component b(t) is narrowband, where as the spurious component c(t)n(t)
is wide band. Hence by applying the multiplier output to a base band (low pass) filter most of
the power in the spurious component c(t)n(t) is filtered out. Thus the effect of the interference
n(t) is thus significantly reduced at the receiver output.
The integration is carried out for the bit interval 0 t T b to provide the sample
value V. Finally, a decision is made by the receiver.
1. Slow frequency hopping:- In which the symbol rate Rs of the MFSK signal is an
integer multiple of the hop rate Rh. That is several symbols are transmitted on each
frequency hop.
2. Fast Frequency hopping:- In which the hop rate Rh is an integral multiple of the
MFSK symbol rate Rs. That is the carrier frequency will hoop several times during
the transmission of one symbol.
Fig. 8.12 a) Shows the block diagram of an FH / MFSK transmitter, which involves
The incoming binary data are applied to an M-ary FSK modulator. The resulting
modulated wave and the output from a digital frequency synthesizer are then applied to a
mixer that consists of a multiplier followed by a band pass filter. The filter is designed
to select the sum frequency component resulting from the multiplication process as the
transmitted signal. An k bit segments of a PN sequence drive the frequencysynthesizer,
n
which enables the carrier frequency to hop over 2 distinct values. Since frequency
synthesizers are unable to maintain phase coherence over successive hops, most frequency
hops spread spectrum communication system use non coherent M-ary modulation system.
Fig 8.12:- Frequency hop spread M-ary Frequency shift keying
In the receiver the frequency hoping is first removed by mixing the received signal
with the output of a local frequency synthesizer that is synchronized with the transmitter. The
resulting output is then band pass filtered and subsequently processed by a non coherent M-
ary FSK demodulator. To implement this M-ary detector, a bank of M non coherent matched
filters, each of which is matched to one of the MFSK tones is used. By selecting the largest
filtered output, the original transmitted signal is estimated.
An individual FH / MFSK tone of shortest duration is referred as a chip. The chip rate
Rc for an FH / MFSK system is defined by
Rc = Max(Rh,Rs)
In a slow rate frequency hopping multiple symbols are transmitted per hop. Hence
each symbol of a slow FH / MFSK signal is a chip. The bit rate R b of theincoming binary
data. The symbol rate Rs of the MFSK signal, the chip rate Rc and the hop rate Rn are related by
Rc = Rs = Rb /k Rh
where k= log2M
A fast FH / MFSK system differs from a slow FH / MFSK system in that there
are multiple hops per m-ary symbol. Hence in a fast FH / MFSK system each hop is a chip.
Fig. illustrates the variation of the frequency of a slow FH/MFSK signal with time for one
4
complete period of the PN sequence. The period of the PN sequence is 2 -1 = 15. The
FH/MFSK signal has the following parameters:
Number of bits per MFSK symbol K = 2.
K
Number of MFSK tones M=2 =4
k
Total number of frequency hops 2 =8
Fig. illustrates the variation of the transmitted frequency of a fast FH/MFSK signal with time.
The signal has the following parameters:
K
Number of MFSK tones M=2 =4
k
Total number of frequency hops 2 =8