1. The document describes an experiment on amplitude modulation and demodulation. The objectives are to get familiar with communication lab equipment and introduce amplitude modulation and demodulation.
2. Amplitude modulation is described as varying the amplitude of a carrier wave using an information signal. This allows transmission of information signals over long distances using radio frequencies.
3. The experiment involves generating amplitude modulated signals using function generators and observing the signals using an oscilloscope. It also involves recovering the message signal through amplitude demodulation and observing the effects of varying modulation parameters.
1. The document describes an experiment on amplitude modulation and demodulation. The objectives are to get familiar with communication lab equipment and introduce amplitude modulation and demodulation.
2. Amplitude modulation is described as varying the amplitude of a carrier wave using an information signal. This allows transmission of information signals over long distances using radio frequencies.
3. The experiment involves generating amplitude modulated signals using function generators and observing the signals using an oscilloscope. It also involves recovering the message signal through amplitude demodulation and observing the effects of varying modulation parameters.
1. The document describes an experiment on amplitude modulation and demodulation. The objectives are to get familiar with communication lab equipment and introduce amplitude modulation and demodulation.
2. Amplitude modulation is described as varying the amplitude of a carrier wave using an information signal. This allows transmission of information signals over long distances using radio frequencies.
3. The experiment involves generating amplitude modulated signals using function generators and observing the signals using an oscilloscope. It also involves recovering the message signal through amplitude demodulation and observing the effects of varying modulation parameters.
1. The document describes an experiment on amplitude modulation and demodulation. The objectives are to get familiar with communication lab equipment and introduce amplitude modulation and demodulation.
2. Amplitude modulation is described as varying the amplitude of a carrier wave using an information signal. This allows transmission of information signals over long distances using radio frequencies.
3. The experiment involves generating amplitude modulated signals using function generators and observing the signals using an oscilloscope. It also involves recovering the message signal through amplitude demodulation and observing the effects of varying modulation parameters.
OBJECTIVES 1. Get familiar with Com.Lab. equipment, oscilloscopes and kits. 2. Introduction to amplitude modulation and demodulation. GENERAL INFORMATION on Amplitude Modulation/Demodulation Modulation is a process of controlling a quantity with another quantity. In communication it should be understood as controlling one or more property of a signal (carrier) with an information signal since transmitting an information signal in the form of a modulated carrier is either necessary or has certain benefits over transmitting the bare information signal; - Radiating baseband information signal through an antenna has technical difficulties (very long antenna requirement) - Using RF carriers opens the way to band sharing (frequency division mux) with other transmitters. Carrier is primarily a HF sinusoidal signal due to its wave propagation properties and is in general in the form of y (t ) A cos(ct ) where A is the amplitude, c is the frequency and is the angle of the sinusoidal. We are to replace the amplitude A in AM to A(t ) (or x(t ) ) to notify that it is the information signal we are trying to transmit and it varies with time (ex: voice signal). In AM c and are constant. Amplitude modulation is primarily used for commercial/conventional broadcasting.
Fig.1. Unmodulated and amplitude modulated carrier example.
The process of extracting the message from a modulated signal is called demodulation or detection. For AM, demodulation can be accomplished by; - Using a diode + RC circuit (envelope detection) - Using a synchronous detector (requiring exact carrier at the receiver) We have synchronous demodulators in the lab. (Question: We can easily wire carrier to the demodulator in the lab, but how do we generate carrier with exact frequency and phase at a remote receiver?) EXPERIMENT 1.The Amplitude Modulation a) Generate 500kHz and 1Vpp carrier signal by using the RF2function generator. b) Generate 10kHz and 0.8 Vpp message signal by using the FJ1function generator. c) Make required connections except FJ1 on the training set to generate the AM modulated signal. Required connections are given on Fig. 3a. d) Connect the Channel 1 of the oscilloscope to the GM output of the AM module. e) Adjusting the P1 potentiometer, obtain the signal specified in Fig. 2 at the GM output.
Figure 2. The 500kHz signal to be observed at the GM output at step e).
f) Connect the message signal input to the module once again and observe the modulated signal at the GM output. Save the result observed on the screen to your flash disk (FD) and note down your comments. g) Observe the output frequency spectrum using the FFT function on the oscilloscope. Then, change the frequency and the amplitude of the message signal while using the FFT to see the effects of the changes. Take notes. FFT analyzer can be found by pushing theMath button on the oscilloscope. Save display to FD at each interesting result. h) Exit FFT function. Adjust the P1 potentiometer to obtain ideal modulation where modulation index value is 1 and over modulation where modulation index value is above 1. Then, repeat g) for both ideally modulated signal and over modulated signal. Save interesting displays and note down your comments. i) State the block diagram of the modulation process and describe the effect of the P1 potentiometer. j) Repeat e), f), g) and h) using sinusoidal message signal with 50kHz and 0.8Vpp. 2.The Amplitude Demodulation k) Generate 500kHz - 1Vpp carrier signal by using the RF2function generator. l) Generate 10kHz - 0.8Vpp message signal by using the FJ1function generator. m) Make connections on the training kit to set up the AM demodulator as shown in Fig. 3b. n) Connect the Channel 2 of the oscilloscope to the Fb output of the AM demodulator. o) Adjust the P1 and P2 potentiometers on the demodulator part of the module to recover the message signal back at the Fb output of the AM module. p) Change the frequency and the amplitude of the message signal, observe the result and take notes. Save screen shots to FD for your reports.
Figure 3. Module connections for AM modulation(left)/demodulation(right)