Difference between revisions of "Aufgaben:Exercise 2.2: Modulation Depth"

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[[File:P_ID989__Mod_A_2_2.png|right|frame|Definition of modulation depth for DSB–AM]]
 
[[File:P_ID989__Mod_A_2_2.png|right|frame|Definition of modulation depth for DSB–AM]]
The graph shows DSB amplitude-modulated signals  $s_1(t)$  to  $s_4(t)$  with differing modulation depth  $m$. Let message signal  $q(t)$  and carrier signal  $z(t)$  each be cosine:
+
The graph shows  2DSB amplitude-modulated signals"   $s_1(t)$  to  $s_4(t)$  with differing modulation depth  $m$.  Let the message signal  $q(t)$  and the carrier signal  $z(t)$  each be cosine:
 
:$$q(t) = A_{\rm N} \cdot \cos (2 \pi f_{\rm N} t),\hspace{0.2cm} f_{\rm N} = 4\,{\rm kHz}\hspace{0.05cm},$$
 
:$$q(t) = A_{\rm N} \cdot \cos (2 \pi f_{\rm N} t),\hspace{0.2cm} f_{\rm N} = 4\,{\rm kHz}\hspace{0.05cm},$$
 
:$$ z(t) = \hspace{0.2cm}1 \hspace{0.15cm} \cdot \cos (2 \pi f_{\rm T} t),\hspace{0.2cm} f_{\rm T} = 50\,{\rm kHz}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
 
:$$ z(t) = \hspace{0.2cm}1 \hspace{0.15cm} \cdot \cos (2 \pi f_{\rm T} t),\hspace{0.2cm} f_{\rm T} = 50\,{\rm kHz}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
The modulated signal (transmitted signal) with the DC component added in the modulator is  $A_{\rm T}$:
+
The modulated signal  (transmitted signal)  with the DC component added in the modulator is  $A_{\rm T}$:
 
:$$s(t ) = A(t) \cdot z(t), \hspace{0.2cm} A(t) = q(t) + A_{\rm T}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
 
:$$s(t ) = A(t) \cdot z(t), \hspace{0.2cm} A(t) = q(t) + A_{\rm T}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
In the graphs, the chosen normalization was:
+
In the graphs,  the chosen normalization was:
 
:$$A_{\rm T}+ A_{\rm N} = 2\,{\rm V}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
 
:$$A_{\rm T}+ A_{\rm N} = 2\,{\rm V}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
*If the modulation depth is  $m ≤ 1$, then  $A(t)= q(t) + A_{\rm T}$   is equal to the envelope  $a(t)$.  
+
*If the modulation depth is  $m ≤ 1$,  then  $A(t)= q(t) + A_{\rm T}$   is equal to the envelope  $a(t)$.  
*In contrast, for a modulation depth  $m > 1$:
+
*In contrast,  for a modulation depth  $m > 1$:
 
:$$a(t ) = |A(t)|\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
 
:$$a(t ) = |A(t)|\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
 
+
*The cosine curve  $A(t)$  varies between  $A_{\rm max}$  and  $A_{\rm min}$; because of normalization,   ⇒   $A_{\rm max} = 2 \ \rm  V$.  
*The cosine curve  $A(t)$  varies between  $A_{\rm max}$  and  $A_{\rm min}$; because of normalization,  $A_{\rm max} = 2 \ \rm  V$ is always the case.  
+
*The minimum values of  $A(t)$  occur at half the period of the source signal  $($i.e., for  $t = 125 \ \rm µ s)$:
*The minimum values of  $A(t)$  occur at half the period of the source signal $($i.e., for  $t = 125 \ \rm µ s)$ :
 
 
:$$A_{\rm min} = q(T_0/2)+ A_{\rm T} = A_{\rm T}-A_{\rm N}.$$
 
:$$A_{\rm min} = q(T_0/2)+ A_{\rm T} = A_{\rm T}-A_{\rm N}.$$
 
*The numerical values are given in the graph.
 
*The numerical values are given in the graph.
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+
Hints:  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
''Hints:''
 
 
*This exercise belongs to the chapter   [[Modulation_Methods/Double-Sideband_Amplitude_Modulation|Double-Sideband Amplitude Modulation]].
 
*This exercise belongs to the chapter   [[Modulation_Methods/Double-Sideband_Amplitude_Modulation|Double-Sideband Amplitude Modulation]].
 
*Particular reference is made to the page   [[Modulation_Methods/Double-Sideband_Amplitude_Modulation#Double-Sideband_Amplitude_Modulation_with_carrier|DSB-AM with carrier]].
 
*Particular reference is made to the page   [[Modulation_Methods/Double-Sideband_Amplitude_Modulation#Double-Sideband_Amplitude_Modulation_with_carrier|DSB-AM with carrier]].
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<quiz display=simple>
 
<quiz display=simple>
  
{Determine the modulation depth for each of the signals &nbsp;$s_1(t)$, &nbsp;$s_2(t)$, &nbsp;$s_3(t)$&nbsp;.
+
{Determine the modulation depth for each of the signals &nbsp;$s_1(t)$, &nbsp;$s_2(t)$, &nbsp;$s_3(t)$.
 
|type="{}"}
 
|type="{}"}
 
$m_1 \ = \ $ { 0.5 3% }
 
$m_1 \ = \ $ { 0.5 3% }
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$m_3 \ = \ $ { 3 3% }  
 
$m_3 \ = \ $ { 3 3% }  
  
{Which statements are true for the signal &nbsp;$s_4(t)$&nbsp;?
+
{Which statements are true for the signal &nbsp;$s_4(t)$?
 
|type="[]"}
 
|type="[]"}
+ This is a case of "DSB–AM without a carrier".
+
+ This is a case of&nbsp; "DSB–AM without carrier".
 
- The modulation depth is &nbsp;$m = 0$.
 
- The modulation depth is &nbsp;$m = 0$.
 
+ The modulation depth &nbsp;$m$&nbsp; is infinite.
 
+ The modulation depth &nbsp;$m$&nbsp; is infinite.
  
 
 
{Let &nbsp;$A_{\rm T} = A_{\rm N} = 1\ \rm V$, so &nbsp;$m = 1$.&nbsp; What is the spectrum &nbsp;$S_+(f)$&nbsp; of the analytical signal? <br>Which Dirac weights occur at &nbsp;$f_{\rm T}$&nbsp; as well as at &nbsp;$f_{\rm T}± f_{\rm N}$&nbsp;?
+
{Let &nbsp;$A_{\rm T} = A_{\rm N} = 1\ \rm V$ &nbsp; &rArr; &nbsp; $m = 1$.&nbsp; What is the spectrum &nbsp;$S_+(f)$&nbsp; of the analytical signal?&nbsp; Which Dirac weights occur at &nbsp;$f_{\rm T}$&nbsp; as well as at &nbsp;$f_{\rm T}± f_{\rm N}$?
 
|type="{}"}
 
|type="{}"}
 
$S_+(f_{\rm T})  \ = \ $ { 1 3% } $\ \text{V}$  
 
$S_+(f_{\rm T})  \ = \ $ { 1 3% } $\ \text{V}$  
 
$S_+(f_{\rm T} ± f_{\rm N})  \ = \ $ { 0.5 3% }  $\ \text{V}$  
 
$S_+(f_{\rm T} ± f_{\rm N})  \ = \ $ { 0.5 3% }  $\ \text{V}$  
  
{Now let &nbsp;$m = 1$.&nbsp; Which fraction &nbsp;$P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S}$&nbsp; of the total transmission power &nbsp;$P_{\rm S}$&nbsp; is due to the carrier alone, and thus cannot be used for demodulation??
+
{Now let &nbsp;$m = 1$.&nbsp; Which fraction &nbsp;$P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S}$&nbsp; of the total transmission power &nbsp;$P_{\rm S}$&nbsp; is due to the carrier alone,&nbsp; and thus cannot be used for demodulation??
 
|type="{}"}
 
|type="{}"}
 
$P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S}  \ = \ $ { 0.667 3% }  
 
$P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S}  \ = \ $ { 0.667 3% }  
  
{Generalize the result from &nbsp; '''(4)'''&nbsp; for an arbitrary modulation depth&nbsp;$m$. <br>What are the power ratios for  &nbsp;$m = 0.5$, &nbsp;$m = 3$&nbsp; and &nbsp;$m → ∞$ ?
+
{Generalize the result from &nbsp; '''(4)'''&nbsp; for an arbitrary modulation depth&nbsp; $m$.&nbsp; What are the power ratios for  &nbsp;$m = 0.5$, &nbsp;$m = 3$&nbsp; and &nbsp;$m → ∞$?
 
|type="{}"}
 
|type="{}"}
 
$m = 0.5\text{:}\hspace{0.3cm} P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S}  \ = \ $ { 0.889 3% }  
 
$m = 0.5\text{:}\hspace{0.3cm} P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S}  \ = \ $ { 0.889 3% }  
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$m → ∞ \text{:}\hspace{0.3cm} P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S}  \ = \  $ { 0. }  
 
$m → ∞ \text{:}\hspace{0.3cm} P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S}  \ = \  $ { 0. }  
  
{Based on the calculations so far, which of the following assessments seem reasonable to you?
+
{Based on the calculations so far,&nbsp; which of the following statements seem reasonable to you?
 
|type="[]"}
 
|type="[]"}
+ $m ≈ 1$&nbsp; s more favorable than a small&nbsp; $m$ for energy reasons.
+
+ $m ≈ 1$&nbsp; is more favorable than a small&nbsp; $m$&nbsp; for energy reasons.
 
+ The carrier is only useful for envelope demodulation.
 
+ The carrier is only useful for envelope demodulation.
 
</quiz>
 
</quiz>

Revision as of 15:46, 29 November 2021

Definition of modulation depth for DSB–AM

The graph shows  2DSB amplitude-modulated signals"   $s_1(t)$  to  $s_4(t)$  with differing modulation depth  $m$.  Let the message signal  $q(t)$  and the carrier signal  $z(t)$  each be cosine:

$$q(t) = A_{\rm N} \cdot \cos (2 \pi f_{\rm N} t),\hspace{0.2cm} f_{\rm N} = 4\,{\rm kHz}\hspace{0.05cm},$$
$$ z(t) = \hspace{0.2cm}1 \hspace{0.15cm} \cdot \cos (2 \pi f_{\rm T} t),\hspace{0.2cm} f_{\rm T} = 50\,{\rm kHz}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$

The modulated signal  (transmitted signal)  with the DC component added in the modulator is  $A_{\rm T}$:

$$s(t ) = A(t) \cdot z(t), \hspace{0.2cm} A(t) = q(t) + A_{\rm T}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$

In the graphs,  the chosen normalization was:

$$A_{\rm T}+ A_{\rm N} = 2\,{\rm V}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
  • If the modulation depth is  $m ≤ 1$,  then  $A(t)= q(t) + A_{\rm T}$  is equal to the envelope  $a(t)$.
  • In contrast,  for a modulation depth  $m > 1$:
$$a(t ) = |A(t)|\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
  • The cosine curve  $A(t)$  varies between  $A_{\rm max}$  and  $A_{\rm min}$; because of normalization,   ⇒   $A_{\rm max} = 2 \ \rm V$.
  • The minimum values of  $A(t)$  occur at half the period of the source signal  $($i.e., for  $t = 125 \ \rm µ s)$:
$$A_{\rm min} = q(T_0/2)+ A_{\rm T} = A_{\rm T}-A_{\rm N}.$$
  • The numerical values are given in the graph.



Hints:


Questions

1

Determine the modulation depth for each of the signals  $s_1(t)$,  $s_2(t)$,  $s_3(t)$.

$m_1 \ = \ $

$m_2 \ = \ $

$m_3 \ = \ $

2

Which statements are true for the signal  $s_4(t)$?

This is a case of  "DSB–AM without carrier".
The modulation depth is  $m = 0$.
The modulation depth  $m$  is infinite.

3

Let  $A_{\rm T} = A_{\rm N} = 1\ \rm V$   ⇒   $m = 1$.  What is the spectrum  $S_+(f)$  of the analytical signal?  Which Dirac weights occur at  $f_{\rm T}$  as well as at  $f_{\rm T}± f_{\rm N}$?

$S_+(f_{\rm T}) \ = \ $

$\ \text{V}$
$S_+(f_{\rm T} ± f_{\rm N}) \ = \ $

$\ \text{V}$

4

Now let  $m = 1$.  Which fraction  $P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S}$  of the total transmission power  $P_{\rm S}$  is due to the carrier alone,  and thus cannot be used for demodulation??

$P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S} \ = \ $

5

Generalize the result from   (4)  for an arbitrary modulation depth  $m$.  What are the power ratios for  $m = 0.5$,  $m = 3$  and  $m → ∞$?

$m = 0.5\text{:}\hspace{0.3cm} P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S} \ = \ $

$m = 3.0\text{:}\hspace{0.3cm} P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S} \ = \ $

$m → ∞ \text{:}\hspace{0.3cm} P_{\rm T}/P_{\rm S} \ = \ $

6

Based on the calculations so far,  which of the following statements seem reasonable to you?

$m ≈ 1$  is more favorable than a small  $m$  for energy reasons.
The carrier is only useful for envelope demodulation.


Solution

(1)  From the two equations

$$ A_{\rm max} = A_{\rm T}+A_{\rm N}=2\,\,{\rm V},\hspace{0.3cm} A_{\rm min} = A_{\rm T}-A_{\rm N}\hspace{0.05cm}$$

directly follows:

$$A_{\rm N} = (A_{\rm max} - A_{\rm min})/2,\hspace{0.3cm} A_{\rm T} = (A_{\rm max} + A_{\rm min})/2\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
  • Thus, the modulation depth is
$$m = \frac{A_{\rm max} - A_{\rm min}}{A_{\rm max} + A_{\rm min}}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
  • With the given numerical values, one obtains:

$$ m_1 = \frac{2\,{\rm V} - 0.667\,{\rm V}}{2\,{\rm V} + 0.667\,{\rm V}} \hspace{0.15cm}\underline {= 0.5}\hspace{0.05cm}, \hspace{0.5cm} m_2 = \frac{2\,{\rm V} - 0\,{\rm V}}{2\,{\rm V} + 0\,{\rm V}} \hspace{0.15cm}\underline {= 1.0}\hspace{0.05cm}, \hspace{0.5cm} m_3 = \frac{2\,{\rm V} -(-1\,{\rm V})}{2\,{\rm V} + (-1\,{\rm V})} \hspace{0.15cm}\underline{=3.0}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$


(2)  Answers 1 and 3 are correct:

  • In this case,  $A_{\rm T} = 0$, which means it is indeed "DSB-AM without a carrier".
  • The modulation depth  $m = A_{\rm N}/A_{\rm T}$  is infinitely large.



Spectrum: analytical signal

(3)  The spectrum  $S_+(f)$  is composed of three Dirac lines for each modulation depth   $m$  with the following weights:

  • $A_{\rm T}$  $($at  $f = f_{\rm T})$,
  • $m/2 · A_{\rm T}$  $($at  $f = f_{\rm T} ± f_{\rm N})$.


For $m = 1$, the weights are obtained according to the graph:

  • $S_+(f_{\rm T}) = 1\ \rm V$,
  • $S_+(f_{\rm T} ± f_{\rm T}) = 0.5\ \rm V$.



(4)  The power (root mean square) of a harmonic oscillation with amplitude   $A_{\rm T} = 1 \ \rm V$  referenced to the   $1 \ Ω$  resistor is:

$$P_{\rm T} ={A_{\rm T}^2}/{2} = 0.5\,{\rm V}^2 \hspace{0.05cm}.$$
  • In the same way, for the powers of the lower and the upper sideband we obtain:
$$P_{\rm USB} = P_{\rm OSB} =({A_{\rm N}}/{2})^2/2 = 0.125\,{\rm V}^2 \hspace{0.05cm}.$$
  • Thus, for  $m=1$, the ratio we are looking for is:
$${P_{\rm T}}/{P_{\rm S}}= \frac{P_{\rm T}}{P_{\rm USB} + P_{\rm T}+ P_{\rm OSB}}= \frac{0.5\,{\rm V}^2}{0.125\,{\rm V}^2 + 0.5\,{\rm V}^2+ 0.125\,{\rm V}^2}= 2/3\hspace{0.15cm}\underline { = 0.667}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$


(5)  Using the Dirac weights  $m/2 · A_{\rm T}$  of the two sidebands corresponding to subtask  (3) , we get:

$${P_{\rm T}}/{P_{\rm S}}= \frac{A_{\rm T}^2/2}{A_{\rm T}^2/2 + 2 \cdot (m/2)^2 \cdot A_{\rm T}^2/2}= \frac{2}{2 + m^2}\hspace{0.05cm}.$$
  • This leads to the numerical values   $8/9 = 0.889$  $($for  $m = 0.5)$,     $2/11 = 0.182$  $($for  $m = 3)$  und     $0$  $($for  $m \to ∞$).


(6)  Both statements are true:

  • The addition of the carrier only makes sense in order to use the simpler envelope demodulator. This is only possible for  $m \le 1$.
  • However, should the modulation depth be  $m > 1$  and the use of a synchronous demodulator therefore be required, the carrier should be (almost) completely omitted for energy reasons.
  • Similarly due to energy concerns, if an envelope demodulator is used, the largest possible modulation depth  $m < 1$    ⇒   $m \to 1$  should be aimed for.
  • However, a small residual carrier can facilitate carrier recovery, which is needed in a synchronous demodulator for frequency and phase synchronization. Thus, the second statement is only conditionally correct.