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S-72.1140 Transmission Methods in Telecommunication Systems (5 CR)

This document discusses noise in analog carrier wave modulation systems. It begins by defining bandpass noise and how it is converted to baseband noise. It then models detectors for linear and exponential modulation schemes. Finally, it analyzes the post-detection signal-to-noise ratio for synchronous, PM, and FM detectors. The key points are that bandpass noise is modeled as independent in-phase and quadrature noise components, which results in Rayleigh distributed envelope and uniform phase. The pre-detection signal-to-noise ratio is defined based on the bandwidth of the transmission channel. Different detection schemes can provide different post-detection signal-to-noise ratios compared to the pre-detection value.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
39 views

S-72.1140 Transmission Methods in Telecommunication Systems (5 CR)

This document discusses noise in analog carrier wave modulation systems. It begins by defining bandpass noise and how it is converted to baseband noise. It then models detectors for linear and exponential modulation schemes. Finally, it analyzes the post-detection signal-to-noise ratio for synchronous, PM, and FM detectors. The key points are that bandpass noise is modeled as independent in-phase and quadrature noise components, which results in Rayleigh distributed envelope and uniform phase. The pre-detection signal-to-noise ratio is defined based on the bandwidth of the transmission channel. Different detection schemes can provide different post-detection signal-to-noise ratios compared to the pre-detection value.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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S-72.

1140 Transmission Methods in


Telecommunication Systems (5 cr)

Noise in analog carrier wave (CW) modulation


systems
Noise in analog CW modulation systems

 Understanding noise
– Lowpass presentation of bandpass noise and its conversion
to baseband noise
– Noise statistics of quadrature presentation in rectangular
and polar coordinates
 Modeling detectors for linear and exponential modulation
 Analysis of post-detection SNR
– Synchronous detector
– PM-detector
– FM-detector

2 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Noise in carrier wave modulation
systems:basic definitions
 Objectives: Define bandpass noise and use it to analyze post
detection SNR of analog CW systems
 Assume signal is ergodic, e.g., all ensemble averages E[ ] equal
the corresponding time averages <>. Then, for instance
 v(t )  E[v(t )] average value
 v 2 (t )  E[v 2 (t )] average power
 v(t )v(t   )  E[v(t )v(t   )] autocorrelation
where the time average is defined by
1 T /2
 vi (t )  lim  T / 2 vi (t )dt
T 
T
or
1 T /2
 vi (t )   T / 2 vi (t )dt (for a known period)
T
3 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen
Assignment

 v(t )  E[v(t )] 1 T /2
 vi (t )  lim  T / 2 vi (t )dt
T 
T
 v 2 (t )  E[v 2 (t )]
1 T /2
 v(t )v(t   )  E[v(t )v(t   )]  vi (t )   T / 2 vi (t )dt
T
4 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen
The system model
 We consider normalized ergodic analog message whose
amplitude and power are normalized
x(t )  1, S x  x 2  x 2 (t ) , S x  1
Channel loss Post-detection filter
Modulated signal Pre-detection filter

Detector

Transmitted power
Received power Pre-detection noise (after HR)
S R  ST / L  xc2 Received signal (not altered by HR)

5 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Detection models
 Pre-detection signal v(t) is presented in quadrature-carrier form:
v(t )  Av (t ) cos[ ct   v (t )] vi (t )  Av (t ) cos v (t )

 vi (t )cos( ct )  vq (t ) cos( ct ) vq (t )  Av (t )sin v (t )
 Detection models:

vi (t ) Synchronous detector



 Av (t )  Av Envelope detector
y (t )  
v (t ) Phase detector
d (t ) / dt Frequency detector
v

(Remember that FM was defined by:


xC (t )  AC cos[ C t  2 f  t x( )d  ], t  t0 )
t

6 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Pre-detection noise in bandpass channel

 Signal and noise are statistically independent and therefore their


power can be added to form the total pre-detection power:
v 2  xc2  n 2  S R  N R
 The pre-detection (bandpass) noise power is filtered from the
channel noise:
N R   ( / 2) H R ( f ) df  20 ( / 2)df   BT
 2 BT

from to detector
channel

7 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Pre-detection SNR
 Pre-detection signal-to-noise ratio for bandpass channels is defined by

 Note that above BT isSthe


R
/N R
 S R /( Bbandwidth
transmission T
) passing channel noise
power to the detector


For comparison,Nwecan write
 the received signal-to-noise in terms of
 2

R
BT
( / 2) H
 R ( f ) df
baseband system (BW = W) SNR defined by

and therefore also


  S /(W )
R
 Note that always (limiting case is the SSB with BT = W)
S R / N R  S R /( BT )  ( S R / W )(W / BT )   W / BT

(We will see, however, that post detection SNR can be much larger than
!) BT  W  S R / N R  


8 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen
Assignment

S R / N R  S R /( BT )  ( S R / W )(W / BT )   W / BT

9 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Bandpass noise: n(t )  A (t ) cos[ t   (t )] n c n

 We assume stationary, zero mean Gaussian noise process for


which
n  0, n 2   n2  N R
 Bandpass noise in terms of lowpass equivalent signals
n(t )  ni (t )cos( c t )  nq (t )sin( ct )
 The in-phase and quadrature components nq An
are independent and hence n

n
ni (t )nq (t )  0 i

 Their average is zero ni  nq  0 and their average power is the


same: 2 2 2
ni  nq  n  N R

10 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Bandpass noise has Rayleigh distributed
envelope and evenly distributed phase
 I-Q components of the bandpass noise can be presented in
envelope - phase format: Two independent
nq r.v.:s - sum of their
An  ni  nq , n  arctan
2 2 2
variances equals variance
ni of the envelope
 The PDF of envelope is Rayleigh
distributed defined by
An  An2 
p A ( An )  exp    u ( An )
n
NR  2NR  nq An
n
 Therefore mean and variance for the n i
bandpass noise are (integrate from above, how?)
An   N R / 2, An2  2 N R
 N R  An2 / 2  (ni2  nq2 ) / 2 n n n2  n 2 2 2
i q

11 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Assignment

12 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Post detection noise in synchronous detection
 Signal component of synchronous detector:

vDSB (t )  x (t ) exp( j ct )
received DSB signal
vDSB (t )  Ac x(t ) cos( ct )  jAc x(t )sin( ct )
Ac x(t )
vDSB (t ) cos( ct ) 
2 detected message
A x(t ) A x(t )
 c cos(2 c t )  j c sin(2 ct )
2 2
 Noise component of synchronous detector:

n(t ) cos( ct )  cos( ct )  ni (t )cos( ct )  nq (t )sin( ct ) 


 ni (t )  1  cos(2 ct )  / 2  nq (t )sin(2 ct ) / 2
 Detector extracts i-components and removes double frequency
components
yD (t )  Ac x(t )  ni (t ) cos( x) cos( x)  1/ 2  cos(2 x) / 2
cos( x)sin( x)  sin(2 x) / 2
13 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen
Post-detection SNR for DSB

 Obtain signal and noise power after detection from:


yD (t )  Ac x(t )  ni (t )
where average noise and signal power are
N D  ni2 (t )  , S D  Ac2 x 2 (t )  Ac2 S x
Received average signal power is
x 2 (t ) cos 2 ( 0t )  Ac2 S x / 2  S x  2S R / Ac2
S R  Ac2 
   
Sx 1/ 2

and therefore SNR after DSB detector is


S D / N D  Ac2 S x / N D
Ac2 2 S R
2S R 2S R SR
 2      (DSB)
Ac N D N D  BT BT 2 W (DSB)
W

14 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Comparing SNR for DSB and AM

 It can be show, that for AM the post detection SNR is


Sx
SD / N D 
AM
1  Sx
 Comparison of this to the SNR of DSB can done by noting that
in practice
Sx  0.5 tone modulation  SD  0.5 /(1.5)   / 3

S x  0.1 speech signal  SD   /11
 Hence AM performs usually much worse than DSB
 It can be shown that for SSB performance is the same as for
DSB, e.g.
SR
S D / N D USB ,DSB  
W

15 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Exponential modulation and channel noise

 Both PM and FM have constant envelopes so the received


power is constant
xc (t )  Ac cos[ ct   (t )]
S R  xc2  Ac2 / 2
SR Ac2 Ac2
 Received SNR is   yielding for wideband FM
N R 2 N R 2 BT
SR SR SR 
  
N R  BT  2 DW 2 D
where for wideband modulation
BT  2(   2) f m  1, f m W
 2W
 2 DW  2 f  (D  f  / W )

16 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Detection of exponential modulation
assuming small noise power

v(t )  Ac cos[ ct   (t )]  An (t ) cos[ ct   n (t )]


              
Signal Noise
carrier+noise
An (t )sin[ n (t )]
 (t )  arctan
Ac  An (t ) cos[ n (t )]
v

small compared to Ac

An (t )sin[ n (t )]
 (t ) 
v
noise
Ac Detected noise component
17 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen
Post-detection noise spectra for PM
An (t )sin  n (t )  S R  Ac2 / 2
v (t )   Note that after
Ac nq  An sin  n
detection signal
bandwidth is W and
nq (t )  2 thus a post detection
 n
 i  nq
2
 N R   BLP filter is required to remove
2S R out-of-band channel noise

 The channel noise is bandpass noise filtered at the transmission


bandwidth and therefore the respective post-detection noise power
spectral density GPM(f) and the total noise power ND are
2
 nq (t )   f 
GPM ( f )     
 2 S R   BT 
  f 
  
2 S R  BT 
N D  W GPM ( f )df  W / S R
W

BLP
18 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen
Assignment

An (t )sin[ n (t )]
v (t )  arctan
Ac  An (t )cos[ n (t )]

An (t )sin  n (t )  S R  Ac2 / 2
v (t )  
Ac nq  An sin  n
nq (t )  2
 n
 i  nq
2
 N R   BLP
2S R

Explain how the results shown connects to the phasor diagram!

19 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Post-detection SNR for FM
 Recall the definition of FM-signal
xc (t )  AC cos  C t  v (t )  , v (t )  2 f   x( )d 
t

t0
 Frequency discriminator (detector) differentiates the
instantaneous phase to cancel out the inherent integration in
phase. Now  (t )  2 f  x(t )  dv (t ) / dt  Not effected by f
due to small angle appr.
 
dv (t ) 1  dS (t ) d N (t )  1  d S (t ) d  nq (t )  
x(t ) f         
2 dt 2   dt  dt  2  dt 2 S R dt 
 Signal Noise 
 Inspection in frequency domain (In order to find the respective
noise PSDs) after detector
X ( f )  j 2 f  v ( f )
and the noise PSD
2
is
GFM ( f )  Xˆ ( f )  ( 2 f ) 2  N ( f ) / (2 ) 2  f 2  N ( f )
2 2

  2 f (t )  d C (t ) / dt A (t )sin  n (t ) nq (t ) d n x(t )
v (t )  n   ( j 2 f ) n X ( f )
 2 [ fC  f  x(t )] Ac 2S R dt n

20 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Post-detection SNR in FM (cont.)
 Therefore, the post-detection noise PSD can be written as

GFM ( f )  f  N ( f ) with 2 2
and now the PSD for FM post detection noise is

Nq ( f )
N ( f ) 
and the respective total noise power is

2SR

f  f  2

G (f)
FM
 
2S  B  R T

N D  W GFM ( f ) df  W 3 /  3S R 
W

21 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Destination S/N for PM and FM

 For PM we have
S 2

S /N    S  , where  S  
 x 2 2 2

W / S
D D  x  x
R

 For FM we have  W
N D ( PM )  W df 
W

f 2 S x 2S S
SD / N D  R R

W 3 /  3S R  W
f 2
W 3

2 N D ( FM )   df 
f  S W 2S 3S
 3    S x R  3 D 2 S x R R

W   W
D 
Note that SD/ND can
 Under wideband condition D  1 and be increased just by
increasing deviation!
BT  2(   2) f m  1, f m W
 2 W 2
3 B 
 2 DW  D  BT /(2W ) S D / N D   T  S x
4W 
22 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen
FM preemphases and deemphases filters
 FM related noise emphases can be suppressed by pre-
distortion and post detection filters (preemphases and
deemphases filters):

receiver filter Hde ( f )

transmitter filter H pe ( f )

Hde ( f )  1  j ( f / Bde )
1 R
S
1, f  B de
Q: What would happen
if the filters would be TB / ( jf ), f  B
de de
LPF
reversed? (TX filter in
 j ( f / Bde ), f u  f  Bde
receiver & vice versa) H pe ( f )   1  j ( f / Bde )    HPF
 1, f  f u

23 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


FM post-detection S/N with deemphases

 Deemphases filter (that is a lowpass filter connected after


detector) can suppress noise further. FM post-detection noise
PSD and total noise power without deemphases:
f  f  2
W 3
G (f)    N   G ( f )df  W
W
2S B 
FM D FM
R 3S T R

 With deemphases filter (for simplification assume W/Bde>>1):


 
 Bde3  W W 
N D  W GFM ( f ) H de ( f ) df    arctan  
W 2

 B 2
W / SR
S R  Bde Bde
de

where     
1  )
H de ( f ) 
2
W / B  arctan(W / B de de

1  ( f / Bde ) 2
2 2 W  Bde
f Sx SxSR  f 
2
 f 
SD / N D  2     S x  
 BdeW / S R W  Bde   Bde 

24 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Example
 FM radio
f   75 kHz,W  15 kHz, D  5, S x  1/ 2, Bde  2.1kHz
 Without deemphases
S D / N D  3D 2 S x
 (3  52  1 2 )  38 SR

 With deemphases W
S D / N D  ( f  / Bde ) 2 S x  640
 Therefore if DSB or SSB system could be exchanged to FM
system 640 fold transmission power savings could be achieved.
 Note, however that the required transmission bandwidth is now
about 220 kHz /15 kHz = 15 times larger! Also, a problem is the
FM threshold effect that causes the more abrupt post detection
SNR drop, the larger the expansion factor BT/W gets.

25 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Comparison of carrier wave
modulation systems

26 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen


Note to earlier lecture: LP-filter is an
approximation of the ideal integrator
Zin-> <-Zout
Vin Vout

H ( f )Vin ( f )  Vout ( f )
H ( f )  I ( f ) Z out ( f ) /[ I ( f ) Z in ( f )]  Z out ( f ) / Z in ( f )
( j C ) 1 1 1
H( f )   H( f )  ,  1
R  ( j C ) 1 j RC  1 j RC
Ideal integrator is defined by
t  Vin ( f ) 1
Vout ( f )  …  vin ( )d     Vin (0) ( f )
   j 2 f 2
1 1
Vout ( f ) V   (f)
in ( t )  (t )
j 2 f 2
…  (t   d )   exp( j d )
27 Helsinki University of Technology,Communications Laboratory, Timo O. Korhonen

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