SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Twelve voice signals, each band-limited to 3 kHz, are frequency
-multiplexed using 1 kHz guard bands between channels and between
the main carrier and the first channel. The modulation of the main
carrier is AM. Calculate the bandwidth of the composite channel
if the subcarrier modulation is (a) DSB, (b) LSSB.
(a) With DSB each 3 kHz channel becomes a 6 kHz bandwidth when
modulating a subcarrier. So each channel occupies 7 kHz for a total
bandwidth of 84 kHz before modulating the main carrier. The main
carrier is AM so the bandwidth requirement for that signal is double
84 kHz or 168 kHz.
(b) With LSSB each 3 kHz channel becomes a 3 kHz bandwidth when
modulating a subcarrier. So each channel occupies 4 kHz for a total
bandwidth of 48 kHz before modulating the main carrier. The main
carrier is AM so the bandwidth requirement for that signal is double
48 kHz or 96 kHz.
The signal x t
( )= cos 2000πt
( ) is used to modulate a 5 kHz carrier.
Sketch the time waveforms and line spectra if the modulation used is
(a) DSB, (b) AM with µ = 0.5, (c) USSB, (d) LSSB.
(a) xc t
( )= Ac cos 2000πt
( )cos 10000πt
( )
= Ac / 2
( ) cos 8000πt
( )+ cos 12000πt
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
2
0.5 1 1.5
x
c
(t)
-1
-0.5
1
0.5
-10 -5 10
5
|X
c
( f )|
0.25
0.05
0.1
0.15
0.2
t (ms)
f (kHz)
(b) xc t
( )= Ac 1+ 0.5cos 2000πt
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦cos 10000πt
( )
=Ac cos 10000πt
( )+ Ac / 4
( ) cos 8000πt
( )+ cos 12000πt
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
2
0.5 1 1.5
-2
-1
2
1
-10 -5 10
5
0.5
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
x
c
(t)
|X
c
( f )|
t (ms)
f (kHz)
(c) xc t
( )= Ac / 2
( )cos 12000πt
( )
2
0.5 1 1.5
-0.6
-0.2
0.6
0.2
-10 -5 10
5
0.25
0.05
0.1
0.15
0.2
x
c
(t)
|X
c
( f )|
t (ms)
f (kHz)
(d) xc t
( )= Ac / 2
( )cos 8000πt
( )
Show that the system below acts as an envelope detector for a bandpass
signal. Verify that the system can indeed demodulate an AM wave.
(Hint: Consider a general bandpass signal
xc t
( )cos ωct
( )+ xs t
( )sin ωct
( ).
Show that the output is the envelope A / 2
( ) xc
2
t
( )+ xs
2
t
( ). Assume a
narrowband signal.)
x t
( )= xc t
( )cos ωct
( )+ xs t
( )sin ωct
( )
On the top path:
xc t
( )cos ωct
( )+ xs t
( )sin ωct
( ) Mixer
⎯ →
⎯⎯ A
xc t
( )cos ωct
( )
+xs t
( )sin ωct
( )
⎡
⎣
⎢
⎢
⎤
⎦
⎥
⎥
cos ωct +θ
( )
A xc t
( )cos ωct
( )cos ωct +θ
( )+ xs t
( )sin ωct
( )cos ωct +θ
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦ =
A / 2
( ) xc t
( ) cos θ
( )+ cos 2ωct +θ
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦ + xs t
( ) sin −θ
( )+ sin 2ωct +θ
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
{ } LPF
⎯ →
⎯
A / 2
( )
xc t
( )cos θ
( )
−xs t
( )sin θ
( )
⎧
⎨
⎩
⎫
⎬
⎭
Squarer
⎯ →
⎯⎯ A2
/ 4
( )
xc
2
t
( )cos2
θ
( )+ xs
2
t
( )sin2
θ
( )
−2xc t
( )xs t
( )cos θ
( )sin θ
( )
⎧
⎨
⎩
⎪
⎫
⎬
⎭
⎪
x t
( )= xc t
( )cos ωct
( )+ xs t
( )sin ωct
( )
On the bottom path:
xc t
( )cos ωct
( )+ xs t
( )sin ωct
( ) Mixer
⎯ →
⎯⎯ A
xc t
( )cos ωct
( )
+xs t
( )sin ωct
( )
⎡
⎣
⎢
⎢
⎤
⎦
⎥
⎥
sin ωct +θ
( )
A xc t
( )cos ωct
( )sin ωct +θ
( )+ xs t
( )sin ωct
( )sin ωct +θ
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦ =
A / 2
( ) xc t
( ) sin θ
( )+ sin 2ωct +θ
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦ + xs t
( ) cos θ
( )+ cos 2ωct +θ
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
{ } LPF
⎯ →
⎯
A / 2
( )
xc t
( )sin θ
( )
+xs t
( )cos θ
( )
⎧
⎨
⎩
⎫
⎬
⎭
Squarer
⎯ →
⎯⎯ A2
/ 4
( )
xc
2
t
( )sin2
θ
( )+ xs
2
t
( )cos2
θ
( )
+2xc t
( )xs t
( )cos θ
( )sin θ
( )
⎧
⎨
⎩
⎪
⎫
⎬
⎭
⎪
On the top path: A2
/ 4
( )
xc
2
t
( )cos2
θ
( )+ xs
2
t
( )sin2
θ
( )
−2xc t
( )xs t
( )cos θ
( )sin θ
( )
⎧
⎨
⎩
⎪
⎫
⎬
⎭
⎪
On the bottom path: A2
/ 4
( )
xc
2
t
( )sin2
θ
( )+ xs
2
t
( )cos2
θ
( )
+2xc t
( )xs t
( )cos θ
( )sin θ
( )
⎧
⎨
⎩
⎪
⎫
⎬
⎭
⎪
Adding the two signals we get
A2
/ 4
( )
xc
2
t
( )cos2
θ
( )+ xs
2
t
( )sin2
θ
( )
xc
2
t
( )sin2
θ
( )+ xs
2
t
( )cos2
θ
( )
⎧
⎨
⎪
⎩
⎪
⎫
⎬
⎪
⎭
⎪
= A2
/ 4
( ) xc
2
t
( )+ xs
2
t
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
Square
Rooter
⎯ →
⎯⎯ A / 2
( ) xc
2
t
( )+ xs
2
t
( )
This is a circuit that performs the square-root function. It is taken from a
National Semiconductor collection of op-amp circuits.
Show that a squaring circuit followed by a lowpass filter followed by a
square rooter acts as an envelope detector for an AM wave. Show that
if a DSB signal x t
( )cos ωct
( ) is demodulated by this scheme the output
will be x t
( ) / 2.
AM: xc t
( )= Ac 1+ µx t
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦cos ωct
( )
xc
2
t
( )= Ac
2
1+ µx t
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
2
cos2
ωct
( )= Ac
2
/ 2
( ) 1+ µx t
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
2
1+ cos 2ωct
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
Ac
2
/ 2
( ) 1+ µx t
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
2
1+ cos 2ωct
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
LPF
⎯ →
⎯ Ac
2
/ 2
( ) 1+ µx t
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
2
Ac
2
/ 2
( ) 1+ µx t
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
2
Square
Rooter
⎯ →
⎯⎯ Ac / 2
( ) 1+ µx t
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
DSB: xc t
( )= x t
( )cos ωct
( )
xc
2
t
( )= x2
t
( )cos2
ωct
( )= x2
t
( ) 1/ 2
( ) 1+ cos 2ωct
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
x2
t
( ) 1/ 2
( ) 1+ cos 2ωct
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
LPF
⎯ →
⎯ x2
t
( )/ 2
x2
t
( )/ 2
Square
Rooter
⎯ →
⎯⎯ x2
t
( )/ 2 = x t
( ) / 2
Twenty-five radio stations are broadcasting in the band between 3 MHz
and 3.5 MHz. You wish to modify an AM broadcast receiver to receive
the broadcasts. Each audio signal has a maximum frequency fm = 10 kHz.
Describe in detail the changes you would have to make to the standard
broadcast superheterodyne receiver in order to receive the broadcast.
For standard AM, each channel has a transmitted bandwith of BT = 10kHz.
After demodulation that becomes a baseband bandwidth of W = 5kHz. We
need here a bandwidth of 10kHz for the demodulated baseband signal. So
we must increase the IF bandwidth by a factor of two. The RF range of
a standard AM receiver is 540 to 1700 kHz with an IF of 455khz. The
local oscillator range is then 995 to 2155 kHz. We need to change that to a
range of 3.455 to 3.955 MHz. We must also modify the RF amplifier to pass
the signals in the 3 to 3.5 MHz range and reject the image frequencies in the
3.91 to 4.41 MHz range.
A superheterodyne receiver is tuned to a station at 20 MHz. The local
oscillator frequency is 80 MHz and the IF is 100 MHz. (a) What is the
image frequency? (b) If the LO has appreciable second-harmonic
content, what two additional frequencies are received? (c) If the RF
amplifier contains a single-tuned parallel resonant circuit with Q = 50
tuned to 20 MHz, what will be the image attenuation in dB?
(a) The image frequency is fLO + fIF = 80 +100 = 180 MHz.
(b) The second harmonic of the local oscillator is at 2fLO = 160 MHz.
2fLO − fIF = fc = 60 MHz and 2fLO + fIF = fc = 260 MHz
(c) H f
( )=
1
1+ jQ
f
f0
−
f0
f
⎛
⎝
⎜
⎞
⎠
⎟
H 180MHz
( )=
1
1+ j50
180
20
−
20
180
⎛
⎝
⎜
⎞
⎠
⎟
= 0.00225e− j1.5685
H 180MHz
( )dB
= −52.96 dB
A receiver is tuned to receive a 7.225 MHz LSSB signal. The LSSB
signal is modulated by an audio signal that has a 3 kHz bandwidth.
Assume that the receiver uses a superheterodyne circuit with an SSB
IF filter. The IF filter is centered on 3.395 MHz. The LO frequency
is on the high side of the input LSSB signal. (a) Draw a block diagram
of the single-conversion superheterodyne receiver, indicating frequencies
present and typical spectra of the signals at various points within the
receiver. (b) Determine the required RF and IF filter specifications,
assuming that the image frequency is to be attenuated by 40 dB.
fc = 7.225 MHz. The IF filter is centered at 3.395MHz and, since the
signal is LSSB, the upper edge of its passband at fIF = 3.3965MHz is
fLO − fc. Therefore, fLO = 7.225MHz + 3.3965MHz = 10.6215MHz.
The image frequency is fLO + fIF = 14.018MHz.
The RF amplifier/filter should be more than 40 dB down at 14.018MHz and the
IF filter should have a passband from 3.3935MHz to 3.3965MHz and very steep skirts
outside that range.
Five messages with bandwidths 1 kHz, 1 kHz, 2 kHz, 4 kHz and 4 kHz
respectively are to be time-division multiplexed. You have a 4 input
multiplexer with a maximum sampling rate of 8 khz and a 32 kHz clock.
Design a system, in block diagram form, that will multiplex these signals
plus an 8 kHz marker.
BW (kHz) Min. fs
1 2000
1 2000
2 4000
4 8000
4 8000
fs = 8 kHz
M = 4
Marker
4 kHz
4 kHz
fs = 4 kHz
M = 2
2 kHz
fs = 2 kHz
M = 2
1 kHz
1 kHz
32kHz
Clock
÷4
÷2
In an FDM communication system, the transmitted baseband signal is
x t
( )= m1 t
( )cos ω1t
( )+ m2 t
( )cos ω2t
( ). The system under study has a
second-order nonlinearity between transmitter input and receiver output.
Thus, the received baseband signal can be expressed as
y t
( )= a1 x t
( )+ a2 x2
t
( ). Assuming that the two message signals m1 t
( ) and
m2 t
( ) have spectra M1 f
( )= M2 f
( )= Π f /W
( ) sketch the spectrum of
y t
( ). Discuss the difficulties encountered in demodulating the received
baseband signal. In many FDM systems the subcarrier frequencies ω1 and ω2
are harmonically related. Describe any additional problems this presents.
y t
( )= a1 m1 t
( )cos ω1t
( )+ m2 t
( )cos ω2t
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦ + a2 m1 t
( )cos ω1t
( )+ m2 t
( )cos ω2t
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
2
y t
( )= a1m1 t
( )cos ω1t
( )+ a1m2 t
( )cos ω2t
( )
+ a2 m1
2
t
( )cos2
ω1t
( )+ m2
2
t
( )cos2
ω2t
( )+ 2m1 t
( )m2 t
( )cos ω1t
( )cos ω2t
( )
⎡
⎣ ⎤
⎦
y t
( )= a1m1 t
( )cos ω1t
( )+ a1m2 t
( )cos ω2t
( )
+ a2 / 2
( )
m1
2
t
( )+ m1
2
t
( )cos 2ω1t
( )+ m2
2
t
( )+ m2
2
t
( )cos 2ω2t
( )
+2m1 t
( )m2 t
( )cos ω1 −ω2
( )t
( )+ 2m1 t
( )m2 t
( )cos ω1 +ω2
( )t
( )
⎡
⎣
⎢
⎢
⎤
⎦
⎥
⎥
y t
( )= a1m1 t
( )cos ω1t
( )+ a1m2 t
( )cos ω2t
( )
+ a2 / 2
( )
m1
2
t
( )+ m1
2
t
( )cos 2ω1t
( )+ m2
2
t
( )+ m2
2
t
( )cos 2ω2t
( )
+2m1 t
( )m2 t
( )cos ω1 −ω2
( )t
( )+ 2m1 t
( )m2 t
( )cos ω1 +ω2
( )t
( )
⎡
⎣
⎢
⎢
⎤
⎦
⎥
⎥
A superheterodyne receiver is designed to cover the RF frequency range of
45 to 860 MHz, with channel spacings of 8 MHz and an IF of 40 MHz.
Assume high-side injection. (a) If the receiver down-converts the RF signals
to an IF of 40 MHz, calculate the range of frequencies for the LO. (b) Calculate
the range of image frequencies. (Note that the band of image frequencies and
the signal band overlap. This is undesirable. So we up-convert to a higher IF
of 1.2 GHz.) (c) Calculate the new range of frequencies for the LO.
(d) Determine the range of image frequencies.
(a) fLO = fc + fIF ⇒ Range of fLO = 45 + 40 to 860 + 40 or 85 to 900 MHz
(b) The image frequencies are the carrier frequencies plus twice the IF frequency
or 125 to 940 MHz.
(c) New range of fLO is 1.245 GHz to 2.06 GHz.
(d) New range of image frequencies is 2.445 GHz to 3.26 GHz
You have a crystal-controlled 100 kHz oscillator and as many divide-by-n
counters (n ≤10), voltage-controlled oscillators, phase detectors and highpass
filters as needed. Design a frequency synthesizer that will generate a
343 kHz signal.
We will need a frequency resolution of 1 kHz so we will need to divide the
100 kHz down to 1 kHz initially. We can do that with two stages of ÷10
each. We can multiply the 100 kHz by 3 to get 300 kHz and we can multiply
the 10 kHz signal already obtained by 4 to get 40 kHz. Then we can multiply
the 1 kHz signal by 3 to get the needed 3 kHz. We can combine these in two
steps to get the 343 kHz signal. It is best to combine the 40 and 3 first to get
37 and 43 and then filter out the 37 with a highpass filter. Then combine the
43 with the 300 to get 343 and 257 and filter out the 257 with a highpass filter.
Calculate the bandwidth of the composite channel
An analog multiplier, a filter with transfer function H s
( )=
0.1s +100
s
,
an amplifier with gain Ka = 10 and a VCO with Kv = 2 MHz/volt are used to
make a phase-locked loop. Using the linearized model of a phase-locked loop
find the closed-loop system poles. Is this phase-locked loop stable?
Y s
( )
Φ s
( )
=
sKa H s
( )
s + 2πKaKv H s
( )
=
10s
0.1s +100
s
s + 2π ×10 × 2 ×106 0.1s +100
s
Y s
( )
Φ s
( )
=
s s +1000
( )
s2
+ 2π ×10 × 2 ×106
0.1s +100
( )
=
s s +1000
( )
s2
+ 4π ×106
s + 4π ×109
Poles at −1.257 ×107
and −1000.
Both poles are in the open left half-plane, therefore the system is stable.
A stable phase-locked loop is locked. The input signal's phase suddenly jumps
up by a small amount. Describe the sequence of events in the system that makes
it settle to a new locked state with the new input signal phase.
The first thing that happens is that the phase of the input signal lags the VCO
output signal less than previously. This causes the lowpass filter output to move
to a more positive voltage. That more positive voltage drives the VCO to raise
its output signal frequency. That tends to make the phase difference return to
quadrature (or near quadrature). That lowers the output of the lowpass filter
reducing the VCO output signal's frequency. Eventually the lowpass filter's
output signal returns to its original value with the VCO output again leading the
input signal by approximately 90°.
A stable phase-locked loop is locked. The input signal's frequency suddenly drops
by a small amount. Describe the sequence of events in the system that makes it
settle to a new locked state with the new input signal frequency.
The first thing that happens is that the phase of the input signal starts lagging the
VCO output signal more than previously. This causes the lowpass filter output to
move to a more negative voltage. That more negative voltage drives the VCO to
lower its output signal frequency. That tends to make the phase difference return
to quadrature (or near quadrature) at a lower frequency of the VCO output.
Eventually the loop is locked again with the VCO output frequency matching the
input signal's frequency and with the lowpass filter's output signal at a lower
voltage.
A stable phase locked-loop is operating in a locked condition and the output
of the lowpass filter is a small positive voltage. The amplitude of the input
signal suddenly doubles. The phase-locked loop is momentarily perturbed
but soon quickly settles into a new locked state. What happens to the phase
relationship between the input signal and the VCO output signal and what
happens to the lowpass filter output signal?
The fact that the lowpass filter ouput is initially not zero means that the input
signal and the VCO output signal are not exactly 90° apart. The VCO output
leads the input signal by less than 90°. When the input signal amplitude doubles
the output of the lowpass filter would quickly double if there were no feedback
action. But the increase in the lowpass filter output momentarily increases the
frequency of the VCO causing the phase of the VCO output to increase relative
to the phase of the input signal, moving the phase difference closer to 90°. So the
increase in input signal amplitude makes the two signals move closer to exact
quadrature. The lowpass filter output returns to its original value.

More Related Content

PDF
_Amplitude-Modulated-Systems.pdf
PPTX
ADC PPT.pptx
PDF
Amplitude modulated-systems
PPT
Chapter2
PDF
EE303Sp09_L12_Superhet.pdf
PDF
Radio Conformance Test
_Amplitude-Modulated-Systems.pdf
ADC PPT.pptx
Amplitude modulated-systems
Chapter2
EE303Sp09_L12_Superhet.pdf
Radio Conformance Test

Similar to Calculate the bandwidth of the composite channel (20)

PPT
chap4_lecture3 Bandpass Circuits for implementing
PPT
Analog communicationintroduction
PPTX
Communication Systems 1 - Spring 2024 AM Lectures Group 2.pptx
PPTX
Amplitude Modulation (AM)
PDF
orfanidis-solutions-book-2nd-edition-pdf
DOCX
Analog andDigital Communicationonline bits2
PDF
AM - Modulator and Demodulator
PDF
eecs242_lect3_rxarch.pdf
DOCX
Analog and Digitalcommunication online bits
PDF
Introduction to Signal Processing Orfanidis [Solution Manual]
PPT
Chapter 4
PDF
RF Module Design - [Chapter 4] Transceiver Architecture
PPTX
Lecture Notes: EEEC6440315 Communication Systems - Spectral Analysis
PDF
_Pulse-Modulation-Systems.pdf
PDF
blake sample-problems
PDF
Multiband Transceivers - [Chapter 1]
PPT
Introducción a la ingenieria y laboratorio de telecomunicaciones
PPTX
MIC_UNIT 4 - Copy.pptx microwave integrated circuits
PPTX
Signal Processing Assignment Help
PDF
C O M M U N I C A T I O N T H E O R Y J N T U M O D E L P A P E R{Www
chap4_lecture3 Bandpass Circuits for implementing
Analog communicationintroduction
Communication Systems 1 - Spring 2024 AM Lectures Group 2.pptx
Amplitude Modulation (AM)
orfanidis-solutions-book-2nd-edition-pdf
Analog andDigital Communicationonline bits2
AM - Modulator and Demodulator
eecs242_lect3_rxarch.pdf
Analog and Digitalcommunication online bits
Introduction to Signal Processing Orfanidis [Solution Manual]
Chapter 4
RF Module Design - [Chapter 4] Transceiver Architecture
Lecture Notes: EEEC6440315 Communication Systems - Spectral Analysis
_Pulse-Modulation-Systems.pdf
blake sample-problems
Multiband Transceivers - [Chapter 1]
Introducción a la ingenieria y laboratorio de telecomunicaciones
MIC_UNIT 4 - Copy.pptx microwave integrated circuits
Signal Processing Assignment Help
C O M M U N I C A T I O N T H E O R Y J N T U M O D E L P A P E R{Www
Ad

More from shohel rana (14)

PPTX
Robotics template for Presentations.pptx
PPT
Single Positron Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT)
PDF
EEG Artifacts & How to Resolve (Lalit Bansal M.D.)
PDF
ECG Rhythm Interpretation (ECG Rhythm Analysis)
PPT
QRS detection is important in all kinds of ECG signal processing
PDF
Power_Electronics_-__Converters__Applications__and_Design-_3rd_edition.pdf
PDF
An angle modulated signal: Different Example
PDF
AC circuits description with different signal
PPTX
Machine-Learning-and-Robotics.pptx
PPT
16355694.ppt
PPTX
2.-Line-Following-Robot.pptx
PPT
10833762.ppt
PPT
Intro+Imaging.ppt
PPTX
Robot path planning, navigation and localization.pptx
Robotics template for Presentations.pptx
Single Positron Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT)
EEG Artifacts & How to Resolve (Lalit Bansal M.D.)
ECG Rhythm Interpretation (ECG Rhythm Analysis)
QRS detection is important in all kinds of ECG signal processing
Power_Electronics_-__Converters__Applications__and_Design-_3rd_edition.pdf
An angle modulated signal: Different Example
AC circuits description with different signal
Machine-Learning-and-Robotics.pptx
16355694.ppt
2.-Line-Following-Robot.pptx
10833762.ppt
Intro+Imaging.ppt
Robot path planning, navigation and localization.pptx
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Enhancing Cyber Defense Against Zero-Day Attacks using Ensemble Neural Networks
PPTX
web development for engineering and engineering
PPTX
Engineering Ethics, Safety and Environment [Autosaved] (1).pptx
PDF
R24 SURVEYING LAB MANUAL for civil enggi
PPTX
FINAL REVIEW FOR COPD DIANOSIS FOR PULMONARY DISEASE.pptx
PPTX
Lecture Notes Electrical Wiring System Components
PDF
Automation-in-Manufacturing-Chapter-Introduction.pdf
PDF
keyrequirementskkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
PPTX
additive manufacturing of ss316l using mig welding
PPTX
CH1 Production IntroductoryConcepts.pptx
PPTX
Welding lecture in detail for understanding
PDF
Model Code of Practice - Construction Work - 21102022 .pdf
PPTX
CARTOGRAPHY AND GEOINFORMATION VISUALIZATION chapter1 NPTE (2).pptx
PPT
Mechanical Engineering MATERIALS Selection
PPTX
OOP with Java - Java Introduction (Basics)
PDF
Well-logging-methods_new................
DOCX
ASol_English-Language-Literature-Set-1-27-02-2023-converted.docx
PDF
TFEC-4-2020-Design-Guide-for-Timber-Roof-Trusses.pdf
PPTX
Foundation to blockchain - A guide to Blockchain Tech
PDF
Evaluating the Democratization of the Turkish Armed Forces from a Normative P...
Enhancing Cyber Defense Against Zero-Day Attacks using Ensemble Neural Networks
web development for engineering and engineering
Engineering Ethics, Safety and Environment [Autosaved] (1).pptx
R24 SURVEYING LAB MANUAL for civil enggi
FINAL REVIEW FOR COPD DIANOSIS FOR PULMONARY DISEASE.pptx
Lecture Notes Electrical Wiring System Components
Automation-in-Manufacturing-Chapter-Introduction.pdf
keyrequirementskkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
additive manufacturing of ss316l using mig welding
CH1 Production IntroductoryConcepts.pptx
Welding lecture in detail for understanding
Model Code of Practice - Construction Work - 21102022 .pdf
CARTOGRAPHY AND GEOINFORMATION VISUALIZATION chapter1 NPTE (2).pptx
Mechanical Engineering MATERIALS Selection
OOP with Java - Java Introduction (Basics)
Well-logging-methods_new................
ASol_English-Language-Literature-Set-1-27-02-2023-converted.docx
TFEC-4-2020-Design-Guide-for-Timber-Roof-Trusses.pdf
Foundation to blockchain - A guide to Blockchain Tech
Evaluating the Democratization of the Turkish Armed Forces from a Normative P...

Calculate the bandwidth of the composite channel

  • 1. Twelve voice signals, each band-limited to 3 kHz, are frequency -multiplexed using 1 kHz guard bands between channels and between the main carrier and the first channel. The modulation of the main carrier is AM. Calculate the bandwidth of the composite channel if the subcarrier modulation is (a) DSB, (b) LSSB. (a) With DSB each 3 kHz channel becomes a 6 kHz bandwidth when modulating a subcarrier. So each channel occupies 7 kHz for a total bandwidth of 84 kHz before modulating the main carrier. The main carrier is AM so the bandwidth requirement for that signal is double 84 kHz or 168 kHz. (b) With LSSB each 3 kHz channel becomes a 3 kHz bandwidth when modulating a subcarrier. So each channel occupies 4 kHz for a total bandwidth of 48 kHz before modulating the main carrier. The main carrier is AM so the bandwidth requirement for that signal is double 48 kHz or 96 kHz.
  • 2. The signal x t ( )= cos 2000πt ( ) is used to modulate a 5 kHz carrier. Sketch the time waveforms and line spectra if the modulation used is (a) DSB, (b) AM with µ = 0.5, (c) USSB, (d) LSSB. (a) xc t ( )= Ac cos 2000πt ( )cos 10000πt ( ) = Ac / 2 ( ) cos 8000πt ( )+ cos 12000πt ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ 2 0.5 1 1.5 x c (t) -1 -0.5 1 0.5 -10 -5 10 5 |X c ( f )| 0.25 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 t (ms) f (kHz)
  • 3. (b) xc t ( )= Ac 1+ 0.5cos 2000πt ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦cos 10000πt ( ) =Ac cos 10000πt ( )+ Ac / 4 ( ) cos 8000πt ( )+ cos 12000πt ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ 2 0.5 1 1.5 -2 -1 2 1 -10 -5 10 5 0.5 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 x c (t) |X c ( f )| t (ms) f (kHz)
  • 4. (c) xc t ( )= Ac / 2 ( )cos 12000πt ( ) 2 0.5 1 1.5 -0.6 -0.2 0.6 0.2 -10 -5 10 5 0.25 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 x c (t) |X c ( f )| t (ms) f (kHz)
  • 5. (d) xc t ( )= Ac / 2 ( )cos 8000πt ( )
  • 6. Show that the system below acts as an envelope detector for a bandpass signal. Verify that the system can indeed demodulate an AM wave. (Hint: Consider a general bandpass signal xc t ( )cos ωct ( )+ xs t ( )sin ωct ( ). Show that the output is the envelope A / 2 ( ) xc 2 t ( )+ xs 2 t ( ). Assume a narrowband signal.)
  • 7. x t ( )= xc t ( )cos ωct ( )+ xs t ( )sin ωct ( ) On the top path: xc t ( )cos ωct ( )+ xs t ( )sin ωct ( ) Mixer ⎯ → ⎯⎯ A xc t ( )cos ωct ( ) +xs t ( )sin ωct ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎢ ⎢ ⎤ ⎦ ⎥ ⎥ cos ωct +θ ( ) A xc t ( )cos ωct ( )cos ωct +θ ( )+ xs t ( )sin ωct ( )cos ωct +θ ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ = A / 2 ( ) xc t ( ) cos θ ( )+ cos 2ωct +θ ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ + xs t ( ) sin −θ ( )+ sin 2ωct +θ ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ { } LPF ⎯ → ⎯ A / 2 ( ) xc t ( )cos θ ( ) −xs t ( )sin θ ( ) ⎧ ⎨ ⎩ ⎫ ⎬ ⎭ Squarer ⎯ → ⎯⎯ A2 / 4 ( ) xc 2 t ( )cos2 θ ( )+ xs 2 t ( )sin2 θ ( ) −2xc t ( )xs t ( )cos θ ( )sin θ ( ) ⎧ ⎨ ⎩ ⎪ ⎫ ⎬ ⎭ ⎪
  • 8. x t ( )= xc t ( )cos ωct ( )+ xs t ( )sin ωct ( ) On the bottom path: xc t ( )cos ωct ( )+ xs t ( )sin ωct ( ) Mixer ⎯ → ⎯⎯ A xc t ( )cos ωct ( ) +xs t ( )sin ωct ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎢ ⎢ ⎤ ⎦ ⎥ ⎥ sin ωct +θ ( ) A xc t ( )cos ωct ( )sin ωct +θ ( )+ xs t ( )sin ωct ( )sin ωct +θ ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ = A / 2 ( ) xc t ( ) sin θ ( )+ sin 2ωct +θ ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ + xs t ( ) cos θ ( )+ cos 2ωct +θ ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ { } LPF ⎯ → ⎯ A / 2 ( ) xc t ( )sin θ ( ) +xs t ( )cos θ ( ) ⎧ ⎨ ⎩ ⎫ ⎬ ⎭ Squarer ⎯ → ⎯⎯ A2 / 4 ( ) xc 2 t ( )sin2 θ ( )+ xs 2 t ( )cos2 θ ( ) +2xc t ( )xs t ( )cos θ ( )sin θ ( ) ⎧ ⎨ ⎩ ⎪ ⎫ ⎬ ⎭ ⎪
  • 9. On the top path: A2 / 4 ( ) xc 2 t ( )cos2 θ ( )+ xs 2 t ( )sin2 θ ( ) −2xc t ( )xs t ( )cos θ ( )sin θ ( ) ⎧ ⎨ ⎩ ⎪ ⎫ ⎬ ⎭ ⎪ On the bottom path: A2 / 4 ( ) xc 2 t ( )sin2 θ ( )+ xs 2 t ( )cos2 θ ( ) +2xc t ( )xs t ( )cos θ ( )sin θ ( ) ⎧ ⎨ ⎩ ⎪ ⎫ ⎬ ⎭ ⎪ Adding the two signals we get A2 / 4 ( ) xc 2 t ( )cos2 θ ( )+ xs 2 t ( )sin2 θ ( ) xc 2 t ( )sin2 θ ( )+ xs 2 t ( )cos2 θ ( ) ⎧ ⎨ ⎪ ⎩ ⎪ ⎫ ⎬ ⎪ ⎭ ⎪ = A2 / 4 ( ) xc 2 t ( )+ xs 2 t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ Square Rooter ⎯ → ⎯⎯ A / 2 ( ) xc 2 t ( )+ xs 2 t ( )
  • 10. This is a circuit that performs the square-root function. It is taken from a National Semiconductor collection of op-amp circuits.
  • 11. Show that a squaring circuit followed by a lowpass filter followed by a square rooter acts as an envelope detector for an AM wave. Show that if a DSB signal x t ( )cos ωct ( ) is demodulated by this scheme the output will be x t ( ) / 2. AM: xc t ( )= Ac 1+ µx t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦cos ωct ( ) xc 2 t ( )= Ac 2 1+ µx t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ 2 cos2 ωct ( )= Ac 2 / 2 ( ) 1+ µx t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ 2 1+ cos 2ωct ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ Ac 2 / 2 ( ) 1+ µx t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ 2 1+ cos 2ωct ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ LPF ⎯ → ⎯ Ac 2 / 2 ( ) 1+ µx t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ 2 Ac 2 / 2 ( ) 1+ µx t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ 2 Square Rooter ⎯ → ⎯⎯ Ac / 2 ( ) 1+ µx t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ DSB: xc t ( )= x t ( )cos ωct ( ) xc 2 t ( )= x2 t ( )cos2 ωct ( )= x2 t ( ) 1/ 2 ( ) 1+ cos 2ωct ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ x2 t ( ) 1/ 2 ( ) 1+ cos 2ωct ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ LPF ⎯ → ⎯ x2 t ( )/ 2 x2 t ( )/ 2 Square Rooter ⎯ → ⎯⎯ x2 t ( )/ 2 = x t ( ) / 2
  • 12. Twenty-five radio stations are broadcasting in the band between 3 MHz and 3.5 MHz. You wish to modify an AM broadcast receiver to receive the broadcasts. Each audio signal has a maximum frequency fm = 10 kHz. Describe in detail the changes you would have to make to the standard broadcast superheterodyne receiver in order to receive the broadcast. For standard AM, each channel has a transmitted bandwith of BT = 10kHz. After demodulation that becomes a baseband bandwidth of W = 5kHz. We need here a bandwidth of 10kHz for the demodulated baseband signal. So we must increase the IF bandwidth by a factor of two. The RF range of a standard AM receiver is 540 to 1700 kHz with an IF of 455khz. The local oscillator range is then 995 to 2155 kHz. We need to change that to a range of 3.455 to 3.955 MHz. We must also modify the RF amplifier to pass the signals in the 3 to 3.5 MHz range and reject the image frequencies in the 3.91 to 4.41 MHz range.
  • 13. A superheterodyne receiver is tuned to a station at 20 MHz. The local oscillator frequency is 80 MHz and the IF is 100 MHz. (a) What is the image frequency? (b) If the LO has appreciable second-harmonic content, what two additional frequencies are received? (c) If the RF amplifier contains a single-tuned parallel resonant circuit with Q = 50 tuned to 20 MHz, what will be the image attenuation in dB? (a) The image frequency is fLO + fIF = 80 +100 = 180 MHz. (b) The second harmonic of the local oscillator is at 2fLO = 160 MHz. 2fLO − fIF = fc = 60 MHz and 2fLO + fIF = fc = 260 MHz (c) H f ( )= 1 1+ jQ f f0 − f0 f ⎛ ⎝ ⎜ ⎞ ⎠ ⎟ H 180MHz ( )= 1 1+ j50 180 20 − 20 180 ⎛ ⎝ ⎜ ⎞ ⎠ ⎟ = 0.00225e− j1.5685 H 180MHz ( )dB = −52.96 dB
  • 14. A receiver is tuned to receive a 7.225 MHz LSSB signal. The LSSB signal is modulated by an audio signal that has a 3 kHz bandwidth. Assume that the receiver uses a superheterodyne circuit with an SSB IF filter. The IF filter is centered on 3.395 MHz. The LO frequency is on the high side of the input LSSB signal. (a) Draw a block diagram of the single-conversion superheterodyne receiver, indicating frequencies present and typical spectra of the signals at various points within the receiver. (b) Determine the required RF and IF filter specifications, assuming that the image frequency is to be attenuated by 40 dB. fc = 7.225 MHz. The IF filter is centered at 3.395MHz and, since the signal is LSSB, the upper edge of its passband at fIF = 3.3965MHz is fLO − fc. Therefore, fLO = 7.225MHz + 3.3965MHz = 10.6215MHz. The image frequency is fLO + fIF = 14.018MHz.
  • 15. The RF amplifier/filter should be more than 40 dB down at 14.018MHz and the IF filter should have a passband from 3.3935MHz to 3.3965MHz and very steep skirts outside that range.
  • 16. Five messages with bandwidths 1 kHz, 1 kHz, 2 kHz, 4 kHz and 4 kHz respectively are to be time-division multiplexed. You have a 4 input multiplexer with a maximum sampling rate of 8 khz and a 32 kHz clock. Design a system, in block diagram form, that will multiplex these signals plus an 8 kHz marker. BW (kHz) Min. fs 1 2000 1 2000 2 4000 4 8000 4 8000 fs = 8 kHz M = 4 Marker 4 kHz 4 kHz fs = 4 kHz M = 2 2 kHz fs = 2 kHz M = 2 1 kHz 1 kHz 32kHz Clock ÷4 ÷2
  • 17. In an FDM communication system, the transmitted baseband signal is x t ( )= m1 t ( )cos ω1t ( )+ m2 t ( )cos ω2t ( ). The system under study has a second-order nonlinearity between transmitter input and receiver output. Thus, the received baseband signal can be expressed as y t ( )= a1 x t ( )+ a2 x2 t ( ). Assuming that the two message signals m1 t ( ) and m2 t ( ) have spectra M1 f ( )= M2 f ( )= Π f /W ( ) sketch the spectrum of y t ( ). Discuss the difficulties encountered in demodulating the received baseband signal. In many FDM systems the subcarrier frequencies ω1 and ω2 are harmonically related. Describe any additional problems this presents. y t ( )= a1 m1 t ( )cos ω1t ( )+ m2 t ( )cos ω2t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ + a2 m1 t ( )cos ω1t ( )+ m2 t ( )cos ω2t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ 2 y t ( )= a1m1 t ( )cos ω1t ( )+ a1m2 t ( )cos ω2t ( ) + a2 m1 2 t ( )cos2 ω1t ( )+ m2 2 t ( )cos2 ω2t ( )+ 2m1 t ( )m2 t ( )cos ω1t ( )cos ω2t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎤ ⎦ y t ( )= a1m1 t ( )cos ω1t ( )+ a1m2 t ( )cos ω2t ( ) + a2 / 2 ( ) m1 2 t ( )+ m1 2 t ( )cos 2ω1t ( )+ m2 2 t ( )+ m2 2 t ( )cos 2ω2t ( ) +2m1 t ( )m2 t ( )cos ω1 −ω2 ( )t ( )+ 2m1 t ( )m2 t ( )cos ω1 +ω2 ( )t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎢ ⎢ ⎤ ⎦ ⎥ ⎥
  • 18. y t ( )= a1m1 t ( )cos ω1t ( )+ a1m2 t ( )cos ω2t ( ) + a2 / 2 ( ) m1 2 t ( )+ m1 2 t ( )cos 2ω1t ( )+ m2 2 t ( )+ m2 2 t ( )cos 2ω2t ( ) +2m1 t ( )m2 t ( )cos ω1 −ω2 ( )t ( )+ 2m1 t ( )m2 t ( )cos ω1 +ω2 ( )t ( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎢ ⎢ ⎤ ⎦ ⎥ ⎥
  • 19. A superheterodyne receiver is designed to cover the RF frequency range of 45 to 860 MHz, with channel spacings of 8 MHz and an IF of 40 MHz. Assume high-side injection. (a) If the receiver down-converts the RF signals to an IF of 40 MHz, calculate the range of frequencies for the LO. (b) Calculate the range of image frequencies. (Note that the band of image frequencies and the signal band overlap. This is undesirable. So we up-convert to a higher IF of 1.2 GHz.) (c) Calculate the new range of frequencies for the LO. (d) Determine the range of image frequencies. (a) fLO = fc + fIF ⇒ Range of fLO = 45 + 40 to 860 + 40 or 85 to 900 MHz (b) The image frequencies are the carrier frequencies plus twice the IF frequency or 125 to 940 MHz. (c) New range of fLO is 1.245 GHz to 2.06 GHz. (d) New range of image frequencies is 2.445 GHz to 3.26 GHz
  • 20. You have a crystal-controlled 100 kHz oscillator and as many divide-by-n counters (n ≤10), voltage-controlled oscillators, phase detectors and highpass filters as needed. Design a frequency synthesizer that will generate a 343 kHz signal. We will need a frequency resolution of 1 kHz so we will need to divide the 100 kHz down to 1 kHz initially. We can do that with two stages of ÷10 each. We can multiply the 100 kHz by 3 to get 300 kHz and we can multiply the 10 kHz signal already obtained by 4 to get 40 kHz. Then we can multiply the 1 kHz signal by 3 to get the needed 3 kHz. We can combine these in two steps to get the 343 kHz signal. It is best to combine the 40 and 3 first to get 37 and 43 and then filter out the 37 with a highpass filter. Then combine the 43 with the 300 to get 343 and 257 and filter out the 257 with a highpass filter.
  • 22. An analog multiplier, a filter with transfer function H s ( )= 0.1s +100 s , an amplifier with gain Ka = 10 and a VCO with Kv = 2 MHz/volt are used to make a phase-locked loop. Using the linearized model of a phase-locked loop find the closed-loop system poles. Is this phase-locked loop stable? Y s ( ) Φ s ( ) = sKa H s ( ) s + 2πKaKv H s ( ) = 10s 0.1s +100 s s + 2π ×10 × 2 ×106 0.1s +100 s Y s ( ) Φ s ( ) = s s +1000 ( ) s2 + 2π ×10 × 2 ×106 0.1s +100 ( ) = s s +1000 ( ) s2 + 4π ×106 s + 4π ×109 Poles at −1.257 ×107 and −1000. Both poles are in the open left half-plane, therefore the system is stable.
  • 23. A stable phase-locked loop is locked. The input signal's phase suddenly jumps up by a small amount. Describe the sequence of events in the system that makes it settle to a new locked state with the new input signal phase. The first thing that happens is that the phase of the input signal lags the VCO output signal less than previously. This causes the lowpass filter output to move to a more positive voltage. That more positive voltage drives the VCO to raise its output signal frequency. That tends to make the phase difference return to quadrature (or near quadrature). That lowers the output of the lowpass filter reducing the VCO output signal's frequency. Eventually the lowpass filter's output signal returns to its original value with the VCO output again leading the input signal by approximately 90°.
  • 24. A stable phase-locked loop is locked. The input signal's frequency suddenly drops by a small amount. Describe the sequence of events in the system that makes it settle to a new locked state with the new input signal frequency. The first thing that happens is that the phase of the input signal starts lagging the VCO output signal more than previously. This causes the lowpass filter output to move to a more negative voltage. That more negative voltage drives the VCO to lower its output signal frequency. That tends to make the phase difference return to quadrature (or near quadrature) at a lower frequency of the VCO output. Eventually the loop is locked again with the VCO output frequency matching the input signal's frequency and with the lowpass filter's output signal at a lower voltage.
  • 25. A stable phase locked-loop is operating in a locked condition and the output of the lowpass filter is a small positive voltage. The amplitude of the input signal suddenly doubles. The phase-locked loop is momentarily perturbed but soon quickly settles into a new locked state. What happens to the phase relationship between the input signal and the VCO output signal and what happens to the lowpass filter output signal? The fact that the lowpass filter ouput is initially not zero means that the input signal and the VCO output signal are not exactly 90° apart. The VCO output leads the input signal by less than 90°. When the input signal amplitude doubles the output of the lowpass filter would quickly double if there were no feedback action. But the increase in the lowpass filter output momentarily increases the frequency of the VCO causing the phase of the VCO output to increase relative to the phase of the input signal, moving the phase difference closer to 90°. So the increase in input signal amplitude makes the two signals move closer to exact quadrature. The lowpass filter output returns to its original value.