Lecture 13 - Analog Communication (II) : James Barnes (James - Barnes@colostate - Edu)
Lecture 13 - Analog Communication (II) : James Barnes (James - Barnes@colostate - Edu)
Lecture 13 - Analog Communication (II) : James Barnes (James - Barnes@colostate - Edu)
Spring 2008
Reference:
● We can picture x(t) and y(t) as being real and imaginary components of a
complex baseband signal z(t) = x(t) + jy(t).
● z(t) can be transformed into a real passband signal and vice-versa. This is
modulation and de-modulation.
● With independent x(t) and y(t), the modulated passband signal will be
similar to DSB-SC in bandwidth utilization, but we will send two
independent channels in the same bandwidth.
● ˆ
If x(t) and y(t) are not independent, but instead y(t) = ±x(t), ˆ≡ Hilbert
tranform, then we can send one channel in either the upper sideband or
lower sideband only (SSB), thus using half the bandwidth of DSB-SC and
power of DSB-SC.
● Let w(t) = z(t)ejωc t , where ωc is the carrier frequency. We know from the
Modulation Theorem that W (ω) = Z(ω − ωc ). W has only a positive
frequency component (is an ”analytic signal”) and spans a bandwidth of 2B,
which is the bandwidth of z(t).
● We can form a real passband signal by converting w(t) to real:
s(t) = 21 [w(t) + w(t)], where w(t) is the complex conjugate of w(t). Can
easily show that s(t) = z(t)ejωc t + z(t)e−jωc t = x(t)cos(ωc t) − y(t)sin(ωc t).
We cannot regenerate the carrier using the quadrature component, as with the
Costas receiver. There are two strategies for dealing with this:
● Remember that H(jω) = −jsgn(ω) is the Hilbert Transform. There are cof
files for various orders of Hilbert Transformers in the lab support files.
● How do you multiply by j?
-j sgn(Z )
j
Phase Splitter: ) ( jZ )
1 r Baseband Filters
That Remove DC
1 2r cos(Z c to ) z 1 r 2 z 2 Components
In-phase
Carrier
1 r cos(Z c to ) z 1
Quadrature
Carrier
r sin(Z c to ) z 1