Electronics Noises
Electronics Noises
Electronics Noises
Coupled noise[edit]
See also: Electromagnetic compatibility
While noise may be generated in the electronic circuit itself,
additional noise energy can be coupled into a circuit from the
external environment, by inductive coupling or capacitive coupling,
or through the antenna of a radio receiver.
Sources[edit]
Intermodulation noise
Caused when signals of different frequencies share the same
non-linear medium.
Crosstalk
Phenomenon in which a signal transmitted in one circuit or
channel of a transmission systems creates undesired
interference onto a signal in another channel.
Interference
Modification or disruption of a signal travelling along a medium
Atmospheric noise
This noise is also called static noise and it is the natural source
of disturbance caused by lightning discharge in thunderstorm
and the natural (electrical) disturbances occurring in nature.
Industrial noise
Sources such as automobiles, aircraft, ignition electric motors
and switching gear, High voltage wires and fluorescent
lamps cause industrial noise. These noises are produced by the
discharge present in all these operations.
Solar noise
Noise that originates from the Sun is called solar noise. Under
normal conditions there is constant radiation from the Sun due to
its high temperature. Electrical disturbances such as corona
discharges, as well as sunspots can produce additional noise.
The intensity of solar noise varies over time in a solar cycle.
Cosmic noise
Distant stars generate noise called cosmic noise. While these
stars are too far away to individually affect
terrestrial communications systems, their large number leads to
appreciable collective effects. Cosmic noise has been observed
in a range from 8 MHz to 1.43 GHz, the latter frequency
corresponding to the 21-cm hydrogen line. Apart from man-made
noise, it is the strongest component over the range of about 20
to 120 MHz. Little cosmic noise below 20MHz penetrates the
ionosphere, while its eventual disappearance at frequencies in
excess of 1.5 GHz is probably governed by the mechanisms
generating it and its absorption by hydrogen in interstellar
space.[citation needed]
Mitigation[edit]
In many cases noise found on a signal in a
circuit is unwanted. There are many different
noise reduction techniques that can reduce the
noise picked up by a circuit.
Quantification[edit]
The noise level in an electronic system is
typically measured as an
electrical power N in watts or dBm, a root
mean square (RMS) voltage (identical to the
noise standard deviation) in volts, dBμV or
a mean squared error (MSE) in volts squared.
Noise may also be characterized by
its probability distribution and noise spectral
density N0(f) in watts per hertz.
A noise signal is typically considered as a
linear addition to a useful information signal.
Typical signal quality measures involving noise
are signal-to-noise ratio (SNR or S/N), signal-
to-quantization noise ratio (SQNR) in analog-
to-digital conversion and compression, peak
signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) in image and
video coding, Eb/N0 in digital
transmission, carrier to noise ratio (CNR)
before the detector in carrier-modulated
systems, and noise figure in cascaded
amplifiers.
Noise is a random process, characterized
by stochastic properties such as
its variance, distribution, and spectral density.
The spectral distribution of noise can vary
with frequency, so its power density is
measured in watts per hertz (W/Hz). Since the
power in a resistive element is proportional to
the square of the voltage across it, noise
voltage (density) can be described by taking
the square root of the noise power density,
resulting in volts per root hertz
( ). Integrated circuit devices, such
as operational amplifiers commonly
quote equivalent input noise level in these
terms (at room temperature).
Noise power is measured in watts
or decibels (dB) relative to a standard power,
usually indicated by adding a suffix after dB.
Examples of electrical noise-level
measurement units
are dBu, dBm0, dBrn, dBrnC, and dBrn(f1 − f2),
dBrn(144-line).
Noise levels are usually viewed in opposition
to signal levels and so are often seen as part of
a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR).
Telecommunication systems strive to increase
the ratio of signal level to noise level in order to
effectively transmit data. In practice, if the
transmitted signal falls below the level of the
noise (often designated as the noise floor) in
the system, data can no longer be decoded at
the receiver.[citation needed] Noise in
telecommunication systems is a product of
both internal and external sources to the
system.
In a carrier-modulated passband analog
communication system, a certain carrier-to-
noise ratio (CNR) at the radio receiver input
would result in a certain signal-to-noise ratio in
the detected message signal. In a digital
communications system, a
certain Eb/N0 (normalized signal-to-noise ratio)
would result in a certain bit error rate.