Chap-7digital Modulation Techniques Ppt1
Chap-7digital Modulation Techniques Ppt1
Digital modulation
techniques
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5.1
5-1 DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG CONVERSION
5.2
Digital to Analog Conversion
5.3
Figure 5.1 Digital-to-analog conversion
5.4
Figure 5.2 Types of digital-to-analog conversion
5.5
Note
Solution
In this case, r = 4, S = 1000, and N is unknown. We can
find the value of N from
5.7
Example 5.2
5.8
Amplitude Shift Keying (ASK)
5.9
Bandwidth of ASK
5.10
Figure 5.3 Binary amplitude shift keying
5.11
Figure 5.4 Implementation of binary ASK
5.12
Example 5.3
5.13
Example 5.4
5.14
Figure 5.5 Bandwidth of full-duplex ASK used in Example 5.4
5.15
Frequency Shift Keying
5.16
Figure 5.6 Binary frequency shift keying
5.17
Bandwidth of FSK
5.18
Example 5.5
5.19
Coherent and Non Coherent
5.20
Multi level FSK
5.21
Figure 5.7 Bandwidth of MFSK used in Example 5.6
5.22
Example 5.6
Solution
We can have L = 23 = 8. The baud rate is S = 3 Mbps/3 =
1 Mbaud. This means that the carrier frequencies must be
1 MHz apart (2Δf = 1 MHz). The bandwidth is B = 8 ×
1M = 8M. Figure 5.8 shows the allocation of frequencies
and bandwidth.
5.23
Figure 5.8 Bandwidth of MFSK used in Example 5.6
5.24
Phase Shift Keyeing
5.25
Figure 5.9 Binary phase shift keying
5.26
Figure 5.10 Implementation of BASK
5.27
Quadrature PSK
5.28
Figure 5.11 QPSK and its implementation
5.29
Example 5.7
Solution
For QPSK, 2 bits is carried by one signal element. This
means that r = 2. So the signal rate (baud rate) is S = N ×
(1/r) = 6 Mbaud. With a value of d = 0, we have B = S = 6
MHz.
5.30
Constellation Diagrams
5.31
Figure 5.12 Concept of a constellation diagram
5.32
Example 5.8
Solution
Figure 5.13 shows the three constellation diagrams.
5.33
Figure 5.13 Three constellation diagrams
5.34
Note
5.35
Figure 5.14 Constellation diagrams for some QAMs
5.36