Chapter2 Lect1 Updated
Chapter2 Lect1 Updated
Chapter2 Lect1 Updated
Erhan A. İnce
Eeng360 Communication Systems I 1
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Eeng360
Eastern Mediterranean University
Properties of Signals & Noise
In communication systems, the received waveform is
usually categorized into two parts:
Signal: Noise:
The desired part containing the The undesired part
information. that corrupts the
signal
Properties of waveforms include:
• DC value, • phase spectrum,
• root-mean-square (rms) value, • power spectral density,
• normalized power, • bandwidth
• magnitude spectrum, • ………………..
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Physically Realizable Waveforms
Physically realizable waveforms are practical
waveforms which can be measured in a laboratory.
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Physically Realizable Waveforms
Mathematical models that violate some or all of the conditions
listed above are often used
One main reason is to simplify the mathematical analysis.
If we are careful with the mathematical model, the correct
result can be obtained when the answer is properly interpreted.
Physical Waveform
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Periodic Waveforms
Definition
A waveform w(t) is periodic with period T0 if,
w(t) = w(t + T0) for all t
where T0 is the smallest positive number
A sinusoidal waveform of frequency f0 = 1/T0 Hz is periodic
where T0 is the period of the waveform and a is an arbitrary real constant, which
may be taken as zero.
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DC Value
Definition: The DC (direct “current”) value of a
waveform w(t) is given by its time average, ‹w(t)›. Thus,
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If we use a mathematical model with a steady-state
waveform of infinite extent, then the formula with T
can be used
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Power
Definition.
Let v(t) denote the voltage across the input of a circuit, and
let i(t) denote the current into the terminal, as shown
the instantaneous power (incremental work divided by
incremental time) associated with the circuit is given by:
p(t) = v(t)i(t)
the instantaneous power flows into the circuit when p(t) is
positive and flows out of the circuit when p(t) is negative.
The average power is:
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Evaluation of DC value
A 120V , 60 Hz fluorescent lamp wired in a high power factor configuration.
Assume the voltage and current are both sinusoids and in phase ( unity power
factor)
Voltage
Where,
Instantenous Power
0 2 / T0 , and
f 0 1/ T0 60 Hz
Similarly, I DC 0
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p(t) = v(t)i(t)
Evaluation of Power
The instantaneous power is:
p (t ) V cos 0t I cos 0t
1 / 2 VI 1 2 cos 0t
Note : 2 cos x cos y cos( x y ) cos( x y )
2
T Maximum
2T0 0
2
Power
VI
Average
2 Power
The maximum power is: Eeng360 11
Pmax=VI
RMS Value
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Normalized Power
In the concept of Normalized Power, R is assumed to be 1Ω,
although it may be another value in the actual circuit.
Another way of expressing this concept is to say that the
power is given on a per-ohm basis.
It can also be realized that the square root of the normalized
power is the rms value.
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Energy and Power Waveforms
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Energy and Power Waveforms
a waveform can be either an enery or a power signal and not
both.
If w(t) has finite energy, the power averaged over infinite time
is zero.
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Decibel Gain
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or
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Decibel Signal-to-noise Ratio (SNR)
Definition. The decibel signal-to-noise ratio (S/R, SNR) is:
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Decibel with Mili watt Reference (dBm)
where the phasor c = |c|ejc and Re{.} denotes the real part of the complex
quantity {.}.
The phasor can be written as: c x jy c e j c
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