Digitalmodulation in many forms has proven to be an effective means of delivering
voice, data, and video through the limited channel bandwidths of modern
wireless communications networks.
Simply
put, digital modulation has made the modern wireless communications revolution
possible. As users of wireless communications devices seek greater capacity to
send and receive voice-, data- and video-laden signals, network operators have
come to rely on communications standards based on high-capacity digital
modulation formats.
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Modulation
of any form relies on controlled changes in one or more of a periodic
waveform's three basic parameters: amplitude, frequency, and phase. By changing
or modulating a carrier signal in one or more of these parameters, information
can be added or modulated to the carrier at the transmit end of a system, then
recovered or demodulated at the receive end of the system. Traditional analog
forms of modulation relied on simple changes to amplitude, frequency, or phase.
But bandwidth is limited, and modern communications systems are required to
transport increasing amounts of information over channels with relatively narrow
bandwidths.
Just
like their analog counterparts, digital modulation formats manipulate the three
basic carrier signal parameters, but do so in discrete states representing
digital bits. Basic forms of digital modulation include amplitude shift keying (ASK),
frequency shift keying (FSK), phase shift keying (PSK), and modulation in which
several of the parameters are combined such as quadrature amplitude modulation
(QAM), in which at least two discrete phase states and amplitude states are
used to transfer information.
Digitally
modulated signals are typically generated through use of in-phase (I) and
quadrature (Q) rectangular signal coordinates, which can be added to a carrier
via a pair of frequency mixers, one of which is 90 deg. offset from the other.
Binary phase shift keying (BPSK) is a simple form of digital modulation,
keeping amplitude constant but shifting the phase between 0 and 180 deg. In
quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK), four phase states are used.
Digital
modulation formats are characterized in terms of their symbol rates, or the
number of bits that are transmitted per modulation state. In BPSK, for example,
one bit per symbol is transmitted. Because the modulation is either at 0 or 180
deg., there is one I signal state and one Q signal state. In QpSK, in which two
I and two Q values are transmitted, the modulation format sends two bits per
symbol. As a result, QPSK is potentially twice as bandwidth efficient as BPSK.
As modulation formats increase in complexity, they can send an increasing
amount of data over a given portion of the RF/microwave spectrum. Additional
variants of pSK include eight-state PSK (8PSK), 16-state PSK (16PSK),
differential PSK (DPSK), differential quadrature PSK (DQPSK), offset quadrature
pSK (OQPSK), and p-4 quadrature PSK (p-4-QPSK).
For
example, in 16QPSK, there are four I signal states and four Q signal states, so
that a total of 4 x 4 or 16 signal states can be transmitted. In this
modulation format, four bits per symbol are transmitted; that is, the symbol
rate is one quarter the bit rate, making 16QPSK more spectrally efficient than
a less complex form of this modulation format (such as simple QPSK, with two
bits per symbol).
Varying
signals with time, or multiplexing, is also often used with digital modulation
formats to achieve efficient use of available frequency spectrum. Typical
multiplexing formats include frequency-division multiple access (FDMA),
time-division multiple access (TDMA), and code-division multiple access (CDMA).
The
symbol rate, also known as the baud rate, determines the amount of bandwidth
required by a carrier of a given modulation format. The symbol rate is equal to
the bit rate divided by the number of bits transmitted per symbol. For example,
a system with bit resolution of 8 b operating at a sampling rate of 1 MHz
produces a bit stream of 8 b x 1 mHz = 8 MHz.
With
more complex forms of digital modulation come greater linearity and noise
requirements in a system, as an increased number of bits and symbols are packed
closer together. Sometimes increased transmission power might be needed to keep
the symbols of a complex modulation format properly spaced for demodulation.
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CONTACT US
Company: Dingshengwei
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Address: BldgA, the
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Tel: +86 0755 26909863
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Source: mwrf
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