Frequency Shift Keying (FSK) : 2 Semester 1438-1439

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Lecture 5:

Frequency Shift Keying (FSK)


2nd semester 1438-1439

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Outline

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FSK (Frequency Shift Keying)
• The frequency of the carrier signal is varied to represent
binary 1 or 0.
• Both peak amplitude and phase remain constant while the
frequency changes.
• The frequency of the signal during each bit duration is
constant, and its value depends on the bit (0 or 1).

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FSK Modulator
- One way to think about binary FSK (or BFSK) is to consider two
carrier frequencies

Switch between two oscillators accordingly


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ASK and FSK
- Amplitude Shift Keying (ASK):
1- Very simple.
2- Low bandwidth requirements.
3- Very susceptible to interference.

- Frequency Shift Keying (FSK):


1- Needs larger bandwidth.
2- More error resilience than AM.
FSK Modulator

Implement a BFSK modulation that use the following carriers:


1- fc1 = 100 Hz and fc2 = 20Hz
2- fc1 = 180 Hz and fc2 = 50Hz
3- fc1 = 85 Hz and fc2 = 30Hz
Any Questions ?

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