Lecture 6
Lecture 6
Lecture # 6
17th Feb 2007
Instructor
WASEEM KHAN
m (t)
Modulation
Generally speaking modulation is the process of shifting
of baseband signal to passband.
Why modulate?
Modulation allows multiple transmitters with different carrier frequencies
Antenna size is inversely proportional to the frequency. Typical required
length is /4. For telephonic signal having bandwidth 4 kHz, antenna
length is /4 = 3x105/(4x4000) = 18.75 km
Translation to a high frequency band makes the antenna realizable. For
carrier frequency 400 MHz, /4 = 3x105/(4x400x106) = 18.75 cm
Modulation
Modulation is the process by which a characteristic property of a
sinusoidal waveform is varied according to the message signal.
The variable characteristics of a sinusoidal waveform are
Amplitude
Phase
Frequency
|M( )|
0
DSB-SC Amplitude Modulation
x(t)
Amplitude
modulated carrier
A ( - c) |XAM( )| A ( + c)
Ordinary Amplitude Modulation
Ordinary AM is equivalent to DSB-SC modulation of a non-negative
signal.
xAM(t) = [m(t) + A] cos(2 f t + )
-fc fc f
Generation of SSB AM
SSB can be generated by passing DSB through a bandpass
filter.
|XDSB( )|
|HBPF( )|
f
XSSB( )
f
Demodulation of Ordinary AM signal
1.5
Demodulation is the
inverse process of 1 Message
modulation. signal
0.5
This process drags a
bandpass signal back to
0
baseband. 0 0.05 0.1
Time (seconds)
The easiest way of 2
demodulation of ordinary 1
AM is envelope detector. Modulated
0 carrier and
At the receiver, the envelope
modulated signal can be -1
rectified to extract -2
0 0.05 0.1
envelope Time (seconds)
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