Rewa Engineering College: Department of Electronics and Communication
Rewa Engineering College: Department of Electronics and Communication
A
DIGITAL COMMUNICATION
PRESENTATION ON
PHASE SHIFT KEYING (PSK)
{BINARY PHASE SHIFT KEYING (BPSK)}
BY- AMAN SINGH
EN. ROLL NO. 0301EC161005
DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRONICS AND COMMUNICATION
PHASE SHIFT KEYING (PSK)
Phase Shift Keying (PSK) is the digital modulation technique in which the
phase of the carrier signal is changed by varying the sine and cosine inputs
at a particular time.
PSK technique is widely used for wireless LANs, bio-metric, contactless
operations, along with RFID and Bluetooth communications
BINARY PHASE SHIFT KEYING (BPSK)
It uses two opposite signal phases (0 and 180 degrees). The digital signal is broken
up timewise into individual bits (binary digits). The state of each bit is determined
according to the state of the preceding bit.
It is a two phase modulation scheme, where the 0’s and 1’s in a binary message are
represented by two different phase states in the carrier signal: θ=0∘ for binary 1 and
θ=180∘ for binary 0
If the phase of the wave does not change, then the signal state stays the same
(0 or 1).
If the phase of the wave changes by 180 degrees that is, if the phase reverses,
then the signal state changes (from 0 to 1, or from 1 to 0).
Because there are two possible wave phases, BPSK is sometimes called
Biphase modulation.