hw3 Sol
hw3 Sol
1. DSB-SC modulator (Lathi & Ding 4.2-3). You are asked to design a DSB-SC modulator to generate
a modulated signal km(t) cos(c t + ), where m(t) is a signal bandlimited to B Hz. Figure P4.2-3
shows a DSB-SC modulator available in the stockroom. The carrier generator available generates
not cos c t but cos3 c t. Explain whether you would be able to generate the design using only this
equipment. You may use any kind of filter you like.
3
4
cos c t + 14 cos 3c t .
When modulated by cos3 c t, the transmitted signal contains the term 34 m(t) cos c t, which
is the desired modulated signal with spectrum centered at fc . The other term has spectrum
centered at 3fc . A bandpass filter centered at fc allows the passage of the desired term but
suppresses the unwanted term.
b. The signal spectra at points b and c are shown in the following figure.
c. In order to avoid spectral folding overlap after modulation, the minimum usable value of fc
is B, where B is the bandwidth of the lowpass signal m(t).
d. Yes. Since sin3 c t is cos3 c t delayed by /2, if we modulate with sin3 c t = cos3 (c t /2),
then we can demodulate with cos3 (c t /2) = sin3 c t.
e. The expansion of cosn c t contains a term a1 cos c t when n is odd but not when n is even.
Therefore the system works for carrier cosn c t if and only if n is odd.
2. Audio scrambler (Lathi & Ding 4.2-8). The system shown in Fig. P4.2-8 is used for scrambling
audio signals. The output y(t) is the scrambled version of the input m(t).
s ss
s ss
b. Observe that Y (f ) is the same as M(f ) with frequency spectrum inverted, that is, the high
frequencies are shifted to lower frequencies and vice versa. To get back to the original spectrum,
we must invert Y (f ), which can be done using the same scrambler.
3. AM signal (Lathi & Ding 4.3-1). In an amplitude modulation system, the message signal is given
by Fig. P4.3-1 and the carrier frequency is 1 KHz. The modulator output is
sAM (t) = 2(b + 0.5m(t)) cos c t .
T /2
8a2 T 3
a2
=
=
.
T3 3 8
3
0
Note that the power is independent of T and is proportional to the square of the amplitude.
For the sawtooth signal of this problem, a = 2 and T = 0.1, so the power is
4
22
Pm =
= .
3
3
We can rewrite sAM (t) as
sAM (t) = (2b + m(t)) cos c t .
Therefore the power of the modulated signal is
Ps = Pc + Pm = 12 (2b)2 + 12 ( 34 ) = 2b2 + 32 .
b. The peak value of m(t) is 2. If b = 1, the modulation index is mp /A = 2/2b = 1. The
modulation power efficiency is
=
Ps
2/3
1
=
= = 25% .
Pc + Ps
2 + 2/3
4
c. Shown below is the modulated output for one cycle of the input signal.
4
2
0
2
4
0
0.01
0.02
0.03
0.04
0.05
0.06
0.07
0.08
0.09
0.1
2/3
4
Ps
=
= = 57% .
Pc + Ps
1/2 + 2/3
7
e. Shown below is the modulated output for one cycle of the input signal.
4
2
0
2
4
0.01
Homework #3 Solutions
0.02
0.03
0.04
0.05
0.06
0.07
0.08
0.09
0.1
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DSBSC
Mod
s(t)
x(t)
h(t)
eq
y(t)
(t)
z(t)
cos (2 fc t)
cos (2 fc t)
Assume that the noise n(t) has power spectral density Sn (f ) = 0.1 mW/Hz. The PSD Sm (f ) of
m(t) in mW/Hz is
(
10 10|f |/B |f | B
Sm (f ) =
0
|f | > B.
The frequency response of the channel H(f )
10
H(f ) = 0.5
is
|f fc | B/2
B/2 < |f fc | < B
otherwise
c. The required equalizer is Heq (f ) = 2/H(f ). The factor of 2 is needed because cos 2fc t in the
demodulator reduces the signal amplitude by a factor of 2.
0.2 |f fc | B/2
Heq (f ) = 4
B/2 < |f fc | < B
0
otherwise
Figure 3: is due
and to the noise, so the output PSD is
d. If the signal is not present, all of the output
Szn (f ) = 0.1 14 |Heq (f + fc )|2 + |Heq (f fc )|2 |HLPF (f )|2 .
The PSD of z(t) due to noise only and due to signal only are shown in the following figure.
Pm
10B
=
= 12.47 = 11.0 dB .
Pn
0.802B
5. Frequency and phase offset in QAM system. In a QAM system (Fig. 4.19 in the textbook), the
locally generated carrier has a frequency error amd a phase offset ; that is, the receiver carrier
is cos((c + )t + ) or sin((c + )t + ).
Homework #3 Solutions
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Similarly,
After x1 (t) and x2 (t) are passed through a low-pass filter, the outputs are
m1 (t) = m1 (t) cos( t + ) m2 (t) sin( t + )
m2 (t) = m1 (t) sin( t + ) + m2 (t) cos( t + )
b. The desired signal for the upper branch is m1 (t) cos( t + ). The noise after demodulation
is n1 (t) = 2n(t) cos((c + )t + ), which is passed through a LPF to get n1 (t) with PSD
(
N0 |f | B
Sn1 (f ) =
0
|f | > B
The interference power is the power of the undesired signal m2 (t) sin( t + ). Therefore the
signal-to-noise-plus-interference power ratio for the upper branch is
h m21 (t) cos2 ( t + )i
.
2N0 B + h m22 (t) sin2 ( t + )i
R T /2
where hg(t)i represents the time-averaged value hg(t)i = limT T1 T /2 g(t) dt.
SINR1 =
SINR2 =
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