Part 04 Angle Modulation - EEE309
Part 04 Angle Modulation - EEE309
Part 04 Angle Modulation - EEE309
D Md
Dr. Md. Farhad
F h d Hossain
H i
Assistant Professor
Department of EEE, BUET
Email: mfarhadhossain@eee.buet.ac.bd
Office: ECE 331, ECE Building
Part 04
Angle Modulation
Angle Modulation
2
Angle Modulation: Principle (1)
Angle of the carrier is varied according to the message
Carrier amplitude remain constant
Provides better discrimination against noise and interference than AM
Required higher transmission bandwidth than that for AM
Trade-off between channel bandwidth and noise performance is possible
A simple case of an
unmodulated carrier:
3
Angle Modulation: Principle (2)
Two common methods for angle modulation:
kp = Phase sensitivity
1. Phase Modulation (PM): factor (radians/volt)
Phase-modulated signal:
kf = Frequency sensitivity
2. Frequency Modulation (FM): factor (Hz/volt)
Frequency-modulated signal:
4
Angle Modulation: Principle (3)
Angle Modulated Signal: Example 1
Carrier
Message
PM signal
FM signal
i l
5
Angle Modulation: Principle (4)
Angle Modulated Signal: Example 2
Message
PM signal
FM signal
6
Properties of Angle Modulated Signal (1)
Property 1: Constancy of Transmitted Power
Amplitude of PM and FM waves is maintained at a constant value equal to the carrier
amplitude for all time t, irrespective of the sensitivity factors kp and kf
=> Average transmitted power of angle‐modulated waves is a constant
7
Properties of Angle Modulated Signal (2)
Property 3: Irregularity of Zero-Crossings
PM signal
FM signal
=> In angle modulation, the information content of the message signal resides in the
zero crossings of the modulated wave
zero-crossings
8
Properties of Angle Modulated Signal (3)
Property 3: Irregularity of Zero-Crossings (contd. …)
Two special cases:
9
Properties of Angle Modulated Signal (4)
Property 4: Visualization Difficulty of Message Signal
The difficulty in visualizing the message waveform in angle-modulated waves is attributed to the
nonlinear character of angle-modulated waves
AM wave
Easy to visualize the effect
PM wave
Difficult to visualize
10
Properties of Angle Modulated Signal (5)
Property 5: Tradeoff of Increased Transmission Bandwidth for Improved
Noise Performance
An important
p advantage
g of angle
g modulation over AM is the realization of improved
p
noise performance
This advantage is due to the fact that the transmission of a message signal by
modulating the angle of a sinusoidal carrier wave is less sensitive to the presence of
additive noise than transmission by modulating the amplitude of the carrier
In other words,
words the use of angle modulation offers the possibility of exchanging an
increase in transmission bandwidth for an improvement in noise performance.
Such a tradeoff is not possible with amplitude modulation since the transmission
bandwidth of an amplitude-modulated wave is fixed somewhere between the
message bandwidth W and 2W, depending on the type of modulation employed
11
Relationship between PM and FM
PM:
FM:
PM and FM are uniquely related to each other
This means that the properties of PM can be deduced from those of FM and vice versa
12
Frequency Modulation (FM) (1)
Consider a case of single-tone modulation:
FM signal:
13
Narrow-band FM (NBFM)
1. NBFM (β is small compared to one radian):
For small β:
14
NBFM (contd…)
AM signal:
16
WBFM (contd…)
Complex Fourier Coefficient
17
WBFM (contd…)
Thus,
18
WBFM (contd…)
Properties of FM for arbitrary β:
1. Jn(β) = (-1)n J-n(β) for all n
3.
19
WBFM (contd…)
1. The spectrum of an FM wave contains a carrier component and an infinite set of
side frequencies located symmetrically on either side of the carrier at frequency
separations of fm, 2fm, 3fm, ….
2. For the special case of small β compared with unity, only the Bessel coefficients
J0(β) and J1(β) have significant values, so that the FM wave is effectively
p
composed of a carrier and a single
g p pair of side-frequencies
q at fc±fm. This FM
signal is essentially the NBFM signal.
3. The amplitude of the carrier component varies with β according to J0(β). This
implies that the envelope of an FM wave is constant
constant, so that the average power
of FM signal is constant.
20
Spectrum of FM Signals: Example
Case I: fm fixed, Am varies (only positive frequency
part is shown)
21
Spectrum of FM Signals: Example
Case II: fm varies, Am fixed (only positive frequency
part is shown)
22
BW of FM Signals
Theoretically, BW of FM wave is finite
BW of FM signals is effectively limited to a finite number of significant side frequencies
Method 1: Carson
Carson’s
s Rule
Single-tone
1
Multi-tone BT 2f 2W 2f 1 W = BW of m(t)
D ∆f = kf m(t)|max
Method 2: 1% method
BW of an FM wave is the separation between the two frequencies beyond which none of
the side frequencies is greater than 1% of AC
24
BW of FM Signals
Method 2: 1% method (contd…)
Universal curve for evaluating the 1%
U i l f l ti th 1%
bandwidth of an FM wave
PM Signals