Sei sulla pagina 1di 6

Geometric Representation of Bandpass Signals

M -ary Amplitude Shift Keying (Pulse Amplitude Modulation)


Transmitted Signals:
For m {0, 1, . . . , M 1}

Am cos (2fc t) , for 0 t T
sm (t) = Am = A(M 1 2m)
0 , elsewhere
It is useful to express sm (t) in terms of a unit energy rectangular pulse,
 1
, for 0 t T
hT (t) = T
0 , elsewhere
so
sm (t) = Am T hT (t) cos (2fc t)
Basis Signals:
Only one basis signal is required to represent {sm (t) | m = 0, 1, . . . , M 1}:

0 (t) = hT (t) 2 cos (2fc t)
Note: 0 (t) is normalized:
 2   2   2
     
0 (t) = 0 (t) dt = hT (t) 2 cos (2fc t) dt

 T    T
1 2 2 t sin (4fc t)
= (2) cos (2fc t) dt = +
0 T T 2 8fc 0

2 T sin (4fc T ) sin (4fc T )
= + =1+
T 2 8fc 4fc T

= 1
n
since fc T  1 (e.g., fc = 1Ghz, T = 0.1ms, fc T = 105 ). Equality holds if fc T = 4 for some integer n.
Signals:
For m {0, 1, . . . , M 1}

T
sm (t) = Am 0 (t)
2
= sm,0 0 (t)
with

T
sm,0 = Am
2
Signal Space Diagram (M =4):

s3 s2 s1 s0
 -
0 (t)
3A T2 A T2 0 A T2 3A T2

Equivalent lowpass signal:


sm (t) = Am T hT (t) cos (2fc t)

= Am T hT (t)Re ej2fc t


T j2f t
= Re Am hT (t) 2e c
2
 
= Re sl,m (t) 2ej2fc t
where

T
sl,m (t) = Am hT (t)
2
SYSC 3503 1 Winter 2010/11
is the equivalent lowpass signal for sm (t). Also, dene

T
sm = Am
2
so
sl,m (t) = sm hT (t)
M -ary Phase Shift Keying
Transmitted Signals:
For m {0, 1, . . . , M 1}
2
sm (t) = A T hT (t) cos (2fc t + m ) m = m
M
Basis Signals:
Note: sm (t) can also be written as

sm (t) = A T hT (t) cos m cos (2fc t) A T hT (t) sin m sin (2fc t)
Note: cos(2fc t) and sin(2fc t) are orthogonal over [0, T ]:
 T
cos(2fc t), sin(2fc t) = cos(2fc t) sin(2fc t) dt
0
 T
sin2 (2fc t)
=
4fc 0

sin2 (2fc T )
=
4fc

= 0
since fc is typically very large.
Therefore, only two basis signals are required to represent {sm (t) | m = 0, 1, . . . , M 1}:

0 (t) = hT (t) 2 cos (2fc t)

1 (t) = hT (t) 2 sin (2fc t)
Signals:
For m {0, 1, . . . , M 1}

T T
sm (t) = A cos m 0 (t) + A sin m 1 (t)
2 2
= sm,0 0 (t) + sm,1 1 (t)
with

T T
sm,0 = A cos m sm,1 = A sin m
2 2

SYSC 3503 2 Winter 2010/11


Signal Space Diagram:
M =4 M =8
1 (t) 1 (t)
s1 6 s2 6

s3 s1

s s0 s s0
2 - 4 -
0 (t) 0 (t)
A T2 q A T2 q

s5 s7

s3 s6
? ?

Quarternary Phase Shift Keying (QPSK)


Equivalent lowpass signal:


sm (t) = A T hT (t) cos (2fc t + m )
 
= A T hT (t)Re ej(2fc t+m )


T jm j2f t
= Re A e hT (t) 2e c

2
 
= Re sl,m (t) 2ej2fc t
where

T jm
sl,m (t) = A e hT (t)
2
is the equivalent lowpass signal for sm (t). Also, dene

T jm
sm = A e
2
so
sl,m (t) = sm hT (t)

Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM)


Because cos(2fc t) and sin(2fc t) are orthogonal, it is possible to double the capacity of PAM.
Transmitted Signals:
For m {0, 1, . . . , M 1}

sm (t) = Ac,m T hT (t) cos (2fc t) As,m T hT (t) sin (2fc t)
where Ac,m is the amplitude of the cos carrier (the in-phase component), and As,m is the amplitude of the sin
carrier (the quadrature phase component).
Basis Signals:

0 (t) = hT (t) 2 cos (2fc t)

1 (t) = hT (t) 2 sin (2fc t)

SYSC 3503 3 Winter 2010/11


Signals:
For m {0, 1, . . . , M 1}

T T
sm (t) = Ac,m 0 (t) + As,m 1 (t)
2 2
= sm,0 0 (t) + sm,1 1 (t)
with

T T
sm,0 = Ac,m sm,1 = As,m
2 2
Signal Space Diagram:
M =4

1 (t)
s1 6 s0
A T2

 - 0 (t)

A T2 A T2


s2 A T2 s3
?

M = 16

1 (t)
s12 s13 6 s14 s15
3A T2

s8 s9 s10 s11
A T2

 - 0 (t)

3A T2 A T2 A T2 3A T2
A T2
s4 s5 s6 s7


3A T2
s0 s1 s2 s3
?

SYSC 3503 4 Winter 2010/11


M =8

1 (t)
s4 s5 6 s6 s7
T
A 2

 - 0 (t)

3A T2 A T2 A T2 3A T2
A T2
s0 s1 s2 s3
?
Equivalent lowpass signal:


sm (t) = Ac,m T hT (t) cos (2fc t) As,m T hT (t) sin (2fc t)
 
= Re [Ac,m + jAs,m ] T hT (t) [cos(2fc t) + j sin(2fc t)]


T j2f t
= Re [Ac,m + jAs,m ] hT (t) 2e c

2
 
= Re sl,m (t) 2ej2fc t
where

T
sl,m (t) = [Ac,m + jAs,m ] hT (t)
2
is the equivalent lowpass signal for sm (t). Also, dene

T
sm = [Ac,m + jAs,m ]
2
so
sl,m (t) = sm hT (t)

M -ary Frequency Shift Keying (FSK)


Transmitted Signals:
For m {0, 1, . . . , M 1}

sm (t) = A T hT (t) cos (2fm t) fm = fc + mfc
Basis Signals:
One basis signal is required
for each transmitted signal:
m (t) = hT (t) 2 cos (2fm t)
For proper operation, the transmitted signals should all be orthogonal:

k (t), l (t) = k (t)l (t) dt


= hT (t) 2 cos(2fk t)hT (t) 2 cos(2fl t) dt

  2
 
= hT (t) 2 cos(2fk t) cos(2fl t) dt

 T
2
= cos(2fk t) cos(2fl t) dt
T 0
 T
2 sin(2[fk fl ]t) sin(2[fk + fl ]t)
= +
T 4[fk fl ] 4[fk + fl ] 0

2 sin(2[fk fl ]T ) sin(2[fk + fl ]T )
= +
T 4[fk fl ] 4[fk + fl ]
sin(2[fk fl ]T ) sin(2[fk + fl ]T )
= +
2[fk fl ]T 2[fk + fl ]T

SYSC 3503 5 Winter 2010/11


sin(2fc [k l]T ) sin(2[2fc + fc (k + l)]T )
= +
2fc [k l]T 2[2fc + fc (k + l)]T
sin(2fc [k l]T )
=
2fc [k l]T
To ensure orthogonality, fc T must be an integer multiple of 1/2.
Signals:
For m {0, 1, . . . , M 1}

T
sm (t) = A m (t)
2
= sm,m m (t)
with

T A T2 , if m = n
sm,n = A mn =
2 0 , otherwise
Signal Space Diagram (M = 2):

1 (t)
6
A T2 s1

s0
 - 0 (t)

A T2

Equivalent lowpass signal:


sm (t) = A T hT (t) cos (2fm t)
 
= A T hT (t)Re ej2(fc +fc m)t


T j2mfc t j2f t
= Re A e hT (t) 2e c
2
 
= Re sl,m (t) 2ej2fc t
where

T j2mfc t
sl,m (t) = A e hT (t)
2
is the equivalent lowpass signal for sm (t).

SYSC 3503 6 Winter 2010/11

Potrebbero piacerti anche