Digital Communication Chapter 2
Digital Communication Chapter 2
Chapter 2
Digital Modulation
Orthogonal Vector Space
• A complete set of orthogonal vectors is referred to as
orthogonal vector space.
• Consider a three dimensional vector space as shown:
• Consider three unit vectors (VX, VY, VZ) in the direction of X, Y, Z axis respectively.
Any vector A can be represented in terms of its components and unit vectors as
Any vectors in this three dimensional space can be represented in terms of these
three unit vectors only.
If you consider N dimensional space, then any vector A in that space can be
represented as
Orthogonal Representation of Signal
• Representation of a signal as a
vector.
• As weighted sum of orthonormal
basis functions.
• The length of a vector in the signal space equals the square root of the
signal energy.
• The distance between two signal vectors represents the square root of
the energy of the difference of the two signals involved.
One-dimensional Signal
Consider the Orthonormal Basis Function
Consider, two rectangular signals
Two signals
Two-dimensional Signal
Multi-phase signal
Channel:
Examples:
• Coaxial / parallel wire cable: Signal propagates in form of electrical energy
• Optical Fiber Cable: Signal propagates in form of light energy
• Wireless channel: Signal propagates in form of electro-magnetic energy
Channel Attenuation
• It is a reduction of signal strength during transmission.
• The attenuation increases with separation between Tx and Rx (channel length)
• It is also depends on type of channel
Channel Noise
It is a unwanted and unpredictable signal
that modifies the original signal.
The noise signal is Additive in nature i.e. it
superimposes on the original signal.
It power spectral density is flat (like white)
have all frequency components in it
The noise voltage is random that can be
modeled with Gaussian probability
distribution function.
Hence, it is called as Additive White
Gaussian Noise (AWGN)
Channel as a Filter
• Filter is a device/ system whose gain/ attenuation changes with frequency.
• Some frequencies suffers heavy attenuation while some other frequencies pass
through the filter with very low attenuation.
• The frequency band suffers heavy attenuation is called stop-band of the filter.
• The frequency band passes with low attenuation is called pass-band of the filter.
Channel as a Filter (cont..)
• The communication channel also behaves as filter, allowing some band and
rejecting other bands.
Copper Cable Low Pass Filter
OFC, Waveguide High Pass Filter
Wireless Channel Band Pass Filter
• If signal BW > channel BW, some frequency component of signal will be stopped.
Modulation: Pass band transmission
The wireless channel behaves as a pass
band filter that allows the signal in a given
limited band.
2 4 1/Ts 2/Ts
3 8 1/Ts 3/Ts
4 16 1/Ts 4/Ts
5 32 1/Ts 5/Ts
6 64 1/Ts 5/Ts
M-ary PAM
Each symbol is represented with one of the M = 2k
possible amplitude values.
For k = 2, M =4,
Amplitude Shift Keying (ASK)
To transmit the digital information through bandpass channel, the baseband
signal is to be multiplied with a carrier signal .
is the carrier frequency corresponding to the center frequency of the pass
band.
Such signal is called Amplitude Shift Keying (ASK)
ASK signal:
Binary ASK:
For Signal 1: ,
For Signal 2: ,
If Spectrum of ASK signal:
Geometric representation of ASK
•.
Phase Shift Keying (PSK)
•Symbols are different in phase.
•With change in value of ‘m’ the carrier phase changes abruptly at the beginning of
each signaling interval
Binary PSK (BPSK) M=2
(0 and 1)
•Symbols are:
Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK) M=4
•The signal can be represented in two-dimensional signal space with help of two orthonormal basis
functions:
•So
• Example: M = 4 (QPSK)
Constellation Diagram
Euclidean distance between two signal points on constellation
•With increase in M :
= is Quadrature-phase component
Putting, ,
QAM signal can be viewed as summation of two AM carrier signals in phase quadrature.
Geometric representation of QAM signal
The signal can be represented with help of two
orthonormal basis functions:
Examples: M = 8 (8-QAM):
M=8 M1 = 2 M2 = 4
k=3 k1 = 1 k2 = 2
Examples: M = 16 (16-QAM):
M = 16 M1 = 4 M2 = 4
k=4 k1 = 2 k2 = 2
64 QAM constellation diagram
Some Important points on QAM
• Unlike M-ary PSK, in M-ary QAM, the minimum Euclidian distance
(distance between two nearest signal points) remains constant with
increase in the value of M.
• Here,
•The BFSK signal can be represented with help of two orthonormal basis functions:
•The orthonormality among two basis function is established with given condition:
Spectrum of orthogonal BFSK signal with