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Difference between revisions of "Aufgaben:Exercise 3.7: Angular Modulation of a Harmonic Oscillation"

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'''(1)'''&nbsp; <u>Answers 1, 2 and 4</u> are correct:
 
'''(1)'''&nbsp; <u>Answers 1, 2 and 4</u> are correct:
 
*From the eqution for&nbsp; r(t)&nbsp; it can only be acertained that it is an angle modulation,   
 
*From the eqution for&nbsp; r(t)&nbsp; it can only be acertained that it is an angle modulation,   
*but not whether is is a phase modulation (PM) or a frequency modulation (FM).  
+
*but not whether it is a phase modulation (PM) or a frequency modulation (FM).  
 
*Based on the equation, it is clear that the message frequency is&nbsp; fN=10 kHz&nbsp;.  
 
*Based on the equation, it is clear that the message frequency is&nbsp; fN=10 kHz&nbsp;.  
 
*The phase&nbsp; ϕ_{\rm N} = 0&nbsp; of the source signal would then only apply, if phase modulation were present.  
 
*The phase&nbsp; ϕ_{\rm N} = 0&nbsp; of the source signal would then only apply, if phase modulation were present.  

Revision as of 15:43, 17 March 2022

Demodulator
for FM

The signal arriving at a receiver is:

r(t) = 3\,{\rm V} \cdot \cos \hspace{-0.05cm} \big[2 \pi \cdot 1\,{\rm MHz} \cdot t + 3 \cdot \cos(2 \pi \cdot 10\,{\rm kHz} \cdot t)\big]\hspace{0.05cm}.

 r(t)  is an angle-modulated signal that was neither distorted nor influenced by noise during transmission.

The signals  v_{\rm PM}(t)  and  v_{\rm FM}(t)  result after ideal demodulation by means of

  • a phase demodulator, given by the equation
v_{\rm PM}(t) = \frac{1}{K_{\rm PM}} \cdot \phi_r(t) \hspace{0.05cm},\hspace{0.3cm} {K_{\rm PM}} = 2\,{\rm V}^{-1}\hspace{0.05cm},
  • a frequency demodulator, consisting of a PM demodulator, a differentiator and a constant K.


In order for all signals to have equal units, this constant K is dimensionally constrained.





Hints:



Questions

1

Which statements are definitely true?

There could be a PM modulation.
There could be a FM modulation.
The message phase is definitely  ϕ_{\rm N} = 0.
The message phase is definitely  f_{\rm N} = 10 \ \rm kHz.

2

Calculate the signal v_{\rm PM}(t)  after the phase demodulator.  What is the signal value at time  t = 0?

v_{\rm PM}(t = 0) \ = \

\ \rm V

3

Calculate the signal v_{\rm FM}(t). What is the message phase  ϕ_{\rm N}?

ϕ_{\rm N} \ = \

\ \rm Grad

4

How should  K  be chosen so that the amplitude of  v_{\rm FM}(t)  is equal to  1.5 \ \rm V ?

K\ = \

\ \rm \cdot 10^4 \ 1/s

5

Which of the following statements is true for the FM-modulated signal?

The phase deviation is  ϕ_{\rm max} = 3.
The frequenCY deviation is  Δf_{\rm A} = 30 \ \rm kHz.
Instantaneous frequencies between  0.97\ \rm MHz  And  1.03 \ \rm MHz .
If  f_{\rm N} = 5 \ \rm kHz , the phase deviation would be unchanged.
If  f_{\rm N} = 5 \ \rm kHz  the frequency deviation would be unchanged.


Solution

(1)  Answers 1, 2 and 4 are correct:

  • From the eqution for  r(t)  it can only be acertained that it is an angle modulation,
  • but not whether it is a phase modulation (PM) or a frequency modulation (FM).
  • Based on the equation, it is clear that the message frequency is  f_{\rm N} = 10 \ \rm kHz .
  • The phase  ϕ_{\rm N} = 0  of the source signal would then only apply, if phase modulation were present.


(2)  With the modulator constant  K_{\rm PM} = 2 \ \rm V^{–1}  this is given by:

v_{\rm PM}(t) = \frac{1}{K_{\rm PM}} \cdot \phi_r(t) = \frac{3}{2\,{\rm V}^{-1}} \cdot \cos(2 \pi \cdot 10\,{\rm kHz} \cdot t)\hspace{0.05cm}.
  • At time   t = 0  it therefore holds that:
v_{\rm PM}(t = 0) = {A_{\rm N}} \hspace{0.15cm}\underline {= 1.5\,{\rm V}}\hspace{0.05cm}.


(3)  The output signal   v_{\rm FM}(t)  of the FM demodulator – consisting of a PM–demodulator and differentiator – can be written as:

v_{\rm FM}(t) = \frac{{\rm d}v_{\rm PM}(t)}{{\rm d}t} \cdot K = \frac{K \cdot A_{\rm N}}{2 \pi \cdot f_{\rm N}} \cdot (- \sin(2 \pi \cdot {f_{\rm N}} \cdot t))= \frac{K \cdot A_{\rm N}}{2 \pi \cdot f_{\rm N}} \cdot \cos(2 \pi \cdot {f_{\rm N}} \cdot t + 90^\circ)\hspace{0.05cm}.
  • The message phase is thus   ϕ_{\rm N} \hspace{0.15cm}\underline {= 90^\circ}.


(4)  In this case, it must hold that:  

K ={2 \pi \cdot f_{\rm N}} \hspace{0.15cm}\underline { = 6.28 \cdot 10^{4} \,\,{1}/{ s}} \hspace{0.05cm}.


(5) Answers 1, 2, 3 and 5 are correct:

  • The phase deviation is identical to the modulation index, which can be discerned from the equation given:
\phi_{\rm max} = \eta = 3 = \frac{\Delta f_{\rm A}}{ f_{\rm N}} \hspace{0.05cm}.
  • This leads to the frequency deviation  Δf_{\rm A} = 3 · f_{\rm N} = 30 \ \rm kHz.
  • With a carrier frequency of   f_{\rm T} = 1 \ \rm MHz , the instantaneous frequency  f_{\rm T}(t)  can only take values between  1±0.03 \ \rm MHz .


Thus, the following statement is also valid::

At half the message frequency, the phase deviation  η doubles, while the frequency deviation  Δf_{\rm A} is unaffected:

\eta = \frac{K_{\rm PM} \cdot A_{\rm N}}{ f_{\rm N}} = 6 \hspace{0.3cm}\Rightarrow \hspace{0.3cm}\Delta f_{\rm A} = \eta \cdot f_{\rm N} = 6 \cdot 5\,{\rm kHz} = 30\,{\rm kHz}\hspace{0.05cm}.