Intro To Electronic Comm - Part2
Intro To Electronic Comm - Part2
Definition any undesirable electrical energy that falls within the passband of the
signal.
Effect of noise on the electrical signal :
Extraterrestrial noise
- consists of electrical signal that originate from outside earths atmosphere and therefore also known as deepspace noise.
- 2 categories of extraterrestrial noise.
i solar noise noise that generated directly from the suns heat.
ii cosmic noise / black-body noise noise that is distributed throughout the galaxies.
Man-made noise
- noise that is produced by mankind.
- source : spark-producing mechanism (commutators in electrical motors, automobile ignition
systems, ac power generating/switching equipment, fluorescent lights).
Transit-time noise
- irregular, random variation due to any modification to a stream of carriers as they pass from the
input to the output of a device.
- this noise become noticeable when the time delay takes for a carrier to propagate through a
device is excessive.
N KTB
(6.1)
- for a worst case and maximum transfer of noise power, the load resistance R is made equal to
the internal resistance. Thus the noise power developed
across
2
2 the load resistor :
VN / 2
N KTB
R
VN
4R
(6.2)
V 4 RKTB
(6.3)
a form of internal noise that is correlated to the signal and cannot be present in a
circuit unless there is a signal.
produced by a nonlinear amplification resulting in nonlinear distortion.
there are 2 types of nonlinear distortion that create unwanted frequencies that
interfere with the signal and degrade the performance :
1. Harmonic distortion
occurs when unwanted harmonics of a signal are produced through nonlinear
amplification.
harmonics are integer multiples of the original signal. The original signal is the first
harmonic (fundamental harmonic), a frequency two times the fundamental frequency
is the second harmonic, three times is the third harmonic and so on.
Distortion measurements :
System
1. Harmonic distortion
distortion measurements :
- Nth harmonic distortion = ratio of the rms amplitude of Nth harmonic to the rms amplitude of
the fundamental.
- Total Harmonic Distortion (THD)
vhigher
%THD (6.4)
100
vfundamental
where
vhigher
System
v 2 2 v 33 allvin4 4rmsvalue.
.... vn 2
2. Intermodulation distortion
intermodulation distortion is the generation of unwanted sum and difference
frequencies produced when two or more signals mix in a nonlinear device (cross
products).
unwanted !
System
1. Impulse noise
characterized by high amplitude peaks of short duration (sudden burst of irregularly
shaped pulses) in the total noise spectrum.
common source of impulse noise : transient produced from electromechanical switches
(relays and solenoids), electric motors, appliances, electric lights, power lines, poorquality solder joints and lightning.
2. Interference
electrical interference occurs when information signals from one source produces
frequencies that fall outside their allocated bandwidth and interfere with information
signal from another source.
most occurs in the radio frequency spectrum.
System
signal-to-noise power ratio (S/N) is the ratio of the signal power level to the noise power level
and can be expressed as
S
Ps
N
Pn
(6.5)
in logarithmic function
(6.6)
S
Ps
( dB ) 10 log
N
Pn
Vs 2 / Rin
S
( dB ) 10 log
2
N
Vn / Rout
System
S
Vs
( dB ) 20 log
N
Vn
10
Noise factor is the ratio of input signal-to-noise ratio to output signal-to-noise ratio
(6.9)
( S / N )in
( S / N ) out
Noise figure is the noise factor stated in dB and is a parameter to indicate the
quality of a receiver
(6.10)
( S / N )in
( S / N ) out
NF 10 log F 10 log
11
- in figure (a), the input and output S/N ratios are equal.
System
12
13
System
14
NFT 10 log FT
System
15
1.9 Examples
System
16
1.9 Examples
System
17
1.9 Examples
System
18
1.9 Examples
System
19
1.9 Examples
System
20
1.9 Examples
System
21