Electronic Communication System, Chapter 7 Ans
Electronic Communication System, Chapter 7 Ans
Electronic Communication System, Chapter 7 Ans
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2.
3.
4.
5.
Define instantaneous phase, instantaneous phase deviation, instantaneous frequency, and instantaneous
frequency deviation,
Instantaneous phase deviation is the instantaneous change in the phase of the carrier at a given
instant of time and indicates how much the phase of the carrier is changing with respect to its reference phase.
Instantaneous phase is the precise phase of the carrier at a given instant of time. Instantaneous frequency
deviation is the instantaneous change in the frequency of the carrier and is defined as the first time derivative
of the instantaneous phase deviation. Instantaneous frequency is the precise frequency of the carrier at a given
instant of time.
6.
Define deviation sensitivity for a frequency modulator and for a phase modulator.
Deviation sensitivity is the output-versus-input transfer functions for the modulators, which
give relationship between what output parameter changes in respect to specified changes in the input signal.
For FM, changes would occur in the output frequency in respect to changes in amplitude to
the input voltage.
For PM, changes would occur in the phase of the output frequency in respect to changes in
the amplitude of the input voltage.
7.
Describe the relationship between the instantaneous carrier frequency and the modulating signal for FM.
The instantaneous carrier frequency is directly proportional to the amplitude of the modulating signal.
8.
Describe the relationship between the instantaneous carrier frequency and the modulating signal for FM.
The instantaneous carrier frequency is directly proportional to the amplitude of the
modulating signal.
9.
Describe the relationship between frequency deviation and the amplitude and frequency of the modulating
signal.
Frequency deviation is directly proportional to the amplitude of the modulating signal and inversely
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11.
12.
Describe the relationship between modulation index and the modulating signal for FM; for PM.
For FM, modulation index is in direct proportion to the amplitude of the modulating signal and inverse
proportion to the frequency. For PM, modulation index is in direct proportion to the amplitude of the modulating
signal, independent of its frequency.
13.
14.
Describe the difference between a direct frequency modulator and a direct phase modulator.
Direct frequency modulator is a circuit in which the carrier is varied in such a way that instantaneous
phase is proportional to the integral of the modulating signal. Direct phase modulator is a circuit in which the
carrier is varied in such away that instantaneous phase is proportional to the modulating signal.
15.
How can a frequency modulator be converted to a phase modulator; a phase modulator to a frequency
modulator?
FM modulator = integrator followed by a PM modulator. PM modulator = differentiator followed by a FM
modulator.
16.
How many sets of sidebands are produced when a carrier is frequency modulated by a single input frequency?
There are infinite number of pairs of side frequency are produced, therefore infinite bandwidth.
17.
18.
19.
20.
State Carsons general rule for determining the bandwidth foer an angle- modulated wave.
Carsons rule approximate the bandwidth necessary to transmit an angle modulated waves as twice
the sum of the peak frequency deviation and the highest modulating signal frequency.
21.
22.
Describe the relationship between the power in the unmodulated carrier and the power in the modulated wave
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for FM.
Unlike AM, the total power in an unmodulated wave for FM is equal to the power of the
unmodulated carrier.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
Draw the block diagram for a crosby direct FM transmitter and describe its operation.
Frequency modulator
Modulating
signal input
to antenna
AFC loop
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31.
What is the purpose of AFC loop? Why is one required for the crosby transmitter?
The purpose of AFC loop is to achieve a near crystal stability of the transmit carrier frequency without
using a crystal in the carrier oscillator.
It is required for Crosby transmitter because this transmitter
uses either VCO, a reactance oscillator, or a linear IC to generate the carrier frequency, thus, it is more
susceptible to frequency drift due to temperature change, power supply fluctuations and so on. But although
this circuit does not totally eliminate frequency drift, it can substantially reduce it.
32.
Draw the block diagram for a phase- locked- loop Fm transmitter and describe its operation.
fo
Nfo
FM output
Phase-locked loop
DC correction
voltage
dc + ac
Modulating
signal input
PHASE-LOCKED-LOOP FM TRANSMITTER
The VCO output frequency is divided by N and fed back to the PLL phase comparator where it is
compared to a stable crystal reference frequency. The phase comparator generates a correction voltage
that is proportional to the difference between two frequencies. The correction voltage adjusts the VCO
center frequency to its proper value. Again, the LPF prevents changes in the VCO output frequency due to
the modulating signal from being converted to a voltage, fed back to the VCO, and wiping out the
modulation. The LPF also prevents the loop from locking into a side frequency.
33.
Draw the block diagram for an Armstrong indirect FM transmitter and describe its operation.
ft
ft
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f2
Vc
f1
Vusf + Vlsf = Vm
fo
Vc
fo
Modulating
signal input
ARMSTRONG INDIRECT FM TRANSMITTER
With an Armstrong (indirect) transmitter, a relatively low-frequency subcarrier (fc) is phase shifted
90 (fc) and fed to a balanced modulator, where it is mixed with the input modulating signal (fm). The output
from the balanced modulator is a double-sideband, suppressed carrier wave that is combined with the
original carrier in a combining network to produce a low-index, phase-modulated waveform.
34.
Compare FM to PM.
The modulation index for FM is directly proportional to the amolitude of the modulating signal and
inversely proportional to its frequency while in PM, modulation index is directly proportionalto the amplitude of
modulating signal and independent of its frequency.
PROBLEMS
1. If a frequency modulator produces 5 kHz of frequency deviation for a 10-V modulating signal, determine the
deviation sensitivity. How much frequency deviation is produced for a 2-V modulating signal?
K
K
If Em = 2 V
f
= f / Em
= 5 kHz / 10 V
= 0.5 kHz/V
=?
= K Em
= 0.5 kHz/V (2V)
= 1 kHz
2. If a phase modulator produces 2 rad of phase deviation for a 5-V modulating signal, determine the deviation
sensitivity. How much phase deviation would a 2-V modulating signal produce?
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K
K
If Em = 2 V
= / Em
= 2 rad / 5 V
= 0.4 rad/V
=?
= K Em
= 0.4 rad/V (2V)
= 0.8 rad
3. Determine (a) the peak frequency deviation, (b) the carrier swing, and (c) the modulation index for an FM
modulator with deviation sensitivity K 1 = 4 kHz/V and a modulating signal vm(t) = 10 sin(22000t). What is the
peak frequency deviation produced if the modulating signal were to double in amplitude?
a)
= KEm
= 4 kHz/V (10V)
= 40 kHz
2f
= 2 (40 kHz)
= 80 kHz
f
b)
c)
m
m
= f / fm
= 40 / 2
= 20
4. Determine the peak phase deviation for a PM modulator with a deviation sensitivity K = 1.5 rad/V and a
modulating signal vm(t) = 2 sin(22000t). How much phase deviation is produced for a modulating signal with
twice the amplitude?
= 3 rad
= 6 rad
5. Determine the percent modulation for a television broadcast station with a maximum frequency deviation f =
50 kHz when the modulating signal produces 40 kHz of frequency deviation at the antenna. How much
deviation is required to reach 100% modulation of the carrier?
fmax
factual
= 10 kHz
= 2 kHz
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% modn
6. From the Bessel table, determine the number of sets of sidebands produced for the following modulation
indices: 0.5,1,0,2.0.5.0, and 10.0.
Modulation index
0.5
1.0
2.0
5.0
10.0
# of sideband sets
2
3
4
8
14
7. For an FM modulator with modulation index m = 2, modulating signal vm(t) = Vm sin(22000t), and an
unmodulated carrier vc(t) = 8 sin(2800kt),
(a) Determine the number of sets of significant sidebands.
(b) Determine their amplitudes.
(c) Draw the frequency spectrum showing the relative amplify
(d) Determine the bandwidth.
(e) Determine the bandwidth if the amplitude of the modulating signal increases by a factor
of 2.5.
m
Ec
fc
fm
a)
=2
=8V
= 800 kHz
= 2 kHz
From Bessel Table:
= 4 sidebands
Amplitudes:
Jo
= 8 (0.22)
J1
= 8 (0.58)
J2
= 8 (0.35)
J3
= 8 (0.13)
J4
= 8 (0.03)
n
b)
4.64
1.04
0.24
792
808
c)
2.80
1.04
V
V
V
V
V
4.64
1.76
2.80
0.24
794
796
d)
B
B
e)
= 1.76
= 4.64
= 2.80
= 1.04
= 0.24
798
800
802
804
kHz
806
= 2nfm
= 2 (4) (2 kHz)
= 16 kHz
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m
B
B
= 2 (2.5) = 5
= 2 (8) (2 kHz)
= 32 kHz
.. n
=8
8. For an FM transmitter with 60-kHz carrier swing, determine the frequency deviation. If the amplitude of the
modulating signal decreases by a factor of 2, determine the new frequency deviation.
carrier swing
2f
= 60 kHz
f
= 60 kHz / 2
= 30 kHz
9. For a given input signal, an FM broadcast-band transmitter has a frequency deviation of f = 20 kHz.
Determine the frequency deviation if the amplitude of the modulating signal increases by a factor of 2.5.
= KE m
10. An FM transmitter has a rest frequency fc = 96 MHz and a deviation sensitivity of K1 = 4 kHz/V. Determine the
frequency deviation for a modulating signal vm(t) = 8 sin(22000t). Determine the modulation index.
fc
K
Em
fm
= 96 MHz
= 4 kHz/V
=8V
= 2 kHz
= KE m
= 4 kHz/V (8V)
= 32 kHz
f
m
= f / fm
= 32 / 2
m
= 16
11. Determine the deviation ratio and worst-case bandwidth for an FM signal with a maximum frequency deviation
f = 25 kHz and a maximum modulating signal fm(max) = 12.5 kHz.
fmax
= 20 kHz
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fmax
DR
DR
B
B
= 12.5 kHz
= fmax / fmmzx
= (25 / 12.5)
=2
= 2 (fmax + f mmzx)
= 2 (25 + 12.5)
= 75 kHz
12. For an FM modulator with 40-kHz frequency deviation and a modulating-signal frequency fm= 10 kHz,
determine the bandwidth using both the Bessel table and Carsons rule.
f
fm
= 40 kHz
= 10 kHz
= f / fm
= 40 / 10
m
=4
therefore,
n
=7
Using Bessel:
B
= 2nfm
= 2 (7) (10 kHz)
= 75 kHz
B
Using Carsons:
B
= 2 (f + fm)
= 2 (40 + 10)
= 100 kHz
13. For an FM modulator with an unmodulated carrier amplitude Vc = 20 V, a modulation index m = 1, and a load
resistance RL = 10, determine the power in the modulated carrier and each side frequency, and sketch the
power spectrum for the modulated wave.
m
=1
Jo
J1
J2
J3
= 10 (0.77)
= 10 (0.44)
= 10 (0.11)
= 10 (0.02)
Po
= (15.4)2 / 20
Amplitudes:
= 15.4
= 8.80
= 2.20
= 0.04
V
V
V
V
Power:
= 11.858 W
P1
= (8.80) / 20
= 3.8720 W
P2
(2.20)2 /
20
= 0.2420 W
= (0.04) / 20
= 0.0080 W
P3
Power Spectrum:
11.858 W
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3.872 W
0.242 W
0.008 W
3.872 W
0.242 W
0.008 W
14. For an angle-modulated carrier vc(t) = 2 cos(2200MHz t) with 50 kHz of frequency deviation due to the
modulating signal and a single-frequency interfering signal Vn(t) = 0.5 cos(2200.01 MHz t), determine
(a) Frequency of the demodulated interference signal.
(b) Peak phase and frequency deviation due to the interfering signal.
(c) Signal-to-noise ratio at the output of the demodulator.
b)
Ec
fc
f
En
fn
=2V
= 200 MHz
= 50 kHz
= 0.5 V
= 200.01 MHz
a)
f
= fn f c
= 200.01 200
f
= 10 kHz
fpeak
fpeak
peak
peak
c)
= f (Vn / Vc)
= 10 kHz (0.5 / 2)
= 2.5 kHz
=
= 0.5 / 2
= 0.25 rad
Vn / Vc
15. Determine the total peak phase deviation produced by a 5-kHz band of random noise with a peak voltage Vn =
0.08 V and a carrier vc(t) = 1.5 sin(240 MHz t).
Vn
Vc
= 0.08 V
= 1.5 V
= Vn / V c
= 0.08 / 1.5
= 0.0533
rms:
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= 0.0533 / 2
= 0.0377
18. If a frequency modulator produces 4 kHz of frequency deviation for a 10-Vp modulating signal, determine the
deviation sensitivity.
f
Em
K
K
= 4 kHz
= 10 Vp
= f / Em
= 4 kHz / 10 V
= 400 Hz/V
19. If a phase modulator produces 1,5 rad of phase deviation for a 5-Vp modulating signal, determine the deviation
sensitivity.
= 1.5 rad
Em
= 5 Vp
K
K
= / Em
= 1.5 rad / 5 V
= 0.3 rad/V
20. Determine (a) the peak frequency deviation, (b) the carrier swing, and (c) the modulation index for an FM
modulator with a deviation sensitivity K1 = 3 kHz/V and a modulating signal vm = 6 sin(22000t).
Em
K
fm
=6V
= 3 kHz/V
= 2 kHz
a)
= KEm
= 3 kHz/V (6V)
= 18 kHz
b)
2f
= 2 (18 kHz)
= 36 kHz
c)
= f / fm
= 18 / 2
=9
21. Determine the peak phase deviation for a PM modulator with deviation sensitivity K = 2 rad/V and a
modulating signal vm = 4 sin(21000t).
Em
K
fm
=4V
= 2 rad/V
= 1 rad
= KEm
= 2 rad/V (4V)
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= 8 rad
22. Determine the percent modulation for a television broadcast station with a maximum frequency deviation f =
50 kHz when the modulating signal produces 30 kHz of frequency deviation.
fmax
factual
= 50 kHz
= 30 kHz
% modn
23. From the Bessel table determine the number of side frequencies produced for the following modulation
indices: 0.25,0.5,1.0, 2.0, 5.0, and 10.
Modulation index
0.25
0.5
1.0
2.0
5.0
10.0
# of sideband sets
1
2
3
4
8
14
24. For an FM modulator with modulation index m = 5, modulating signal vm == 2 sin(25kt), and an unmodulated
carrier frequency fc = 400 kHz, determine
(a) Number of sets of significant sidebands.
(b) Sideband amplitudes.
Then (c) Draw the output frequency spectrum.
m
Ec
fc
fm
=5
=2V
= 400 kHz
= 5 kHz
a)
n
b)
Jo
J1
J2
J3
J4
J5
J6
J7
J8
Amplitudes:
= 2 (-0.18)
= 2 (-0.33)
= 2 (0.50)
= 2 (0.36)
= 2 (0.39)
= 2 (0.26)
= 2 (0.13)
= 2 (0.05)
= 2 (0.02)
= -0.36
= -0.66
= 1.00
= 0.72
V
V
V
V
= 0.78
= 0.52
= 0.26
= 0.10
= 0.04
V
V
V
V
V
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1.0
c)
0.52
0.1
0.04
395
435
360
400
440
1.0
0.78
0.78
0.72
0.1
0.72
0.26
-0.66
(kHz)
365
405
0.26
-0.36
370
410
-0.66
375
415
0.52
0.04
380
420
385
425
390
430
25. For an FM transmitter with an 80-kHz carrier swing, determine the frequency deviation. If the amplitude of the
modulating signal decreases by a factor of 4, determine the new frequency deviation.
carrier swing
2f
= 80 kHz
f
= 80 kHz / 2
= 40 kHz
FOR amplitude decreased
by a factor of 4:
f
= K(Em/4)
= 30 kHz / 4
f
= 10 kHz
26. For a given input signal, an FM broadcast transmitter has a frequency deviation f = 40 kHz. Determine the
frequency deviation if the amplitude of the modulating signal increases by a factor of 4.3.
27. An FM transmitter has a rest frequency fc = 94 MHz and a deviation sensitivity K1 = 5kHz/V. Determine the
frequency deviation for a modulating signal vm(t) = 4 Vp.
Em
fc
= 4 Vp
= 94 MHz
= KE m
= 5 kHz/V (4 V)
f
= 172 kHz
28. Determine the deviation ratio and worst-case bandwidth for an FM system with a maximum frequency
deviation of 40 kHz and a maximum modulating-signal frequency fm = 10 kHz.
fmax
fmmax
= 40 kHz
= 10 kHz
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DR
= fmax / fmmzx
= (40 / 10)
=4
DR
29. For an FM modulator with 50 kHz of frequency deviation arid a modulating-signal frequency fm = 8 kHz,
determine the bandwidth using both the Bessel table and Carson's rule.
f
fm
= 50 kHz
= 8 kHz
= f / fm
= 50 / 8
m
= 6.25 6
therefore,
n
=9
Using Bessel:
B
= 2nfm
= 2 (9) (8 kHz)
= 144 kHz
B
Using Carsons:
B
= 2 (f + fm)
= 2 (50 + 8)
= 116 kHz
30. For an FM modulator with an unmodulated carrier voltage vc = 12 Vp, a modulation index = 1, and a load
resistance RL = 12 , determine the power in the modulated carrier and each significant side frequency, and
sketch the power spectrum for the modulated output wave.
GIVEN:
Vc
m
RL
SOLN:
= 12 Vp
=1
= 12
m
=1
Amplitudes:
Jo
J1
J2
J3
= 12 (0.77)
= 12 (0.44)
= 12 (0.11)
= 12 (0.02)
= 9.24
= 5.28
= 1.32
= 0.24
Po
= (9.24)2 / 24
= 3.5574 W
P1
= (5.28)2 / 24
= 1.1616 W
P2
= (1.32)2 / 24
= 0.0726 W
P3
= (0.24)2 / 24
= 0.0024 W
V
V
V
V
Power:
Power Spectrum:
1.1616 W
0.0726 W
0.0024 W
3.5574 W
1.1616 W
0.0726 W
0.0024 W
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31. For an angle-modulated carrier vc = 4 cos(2300 MHz t) with 75 kHz of frequency deviation due to the
modulating signal and a single-frequency interfering signal vn = 0.2 cos(2300.015MHz t), determine
(a) Frequency of the demodulated interference signal.
(b) Peak and rms phase and frequency deviation due to the interfering signal.
(c) S/N ratio at the output of the FM demodulator.
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Ec
fc
f
En
fn
=4V
= 300 MHz
= 75 kHz
= 0.2 V
= 300.015 MHz
a)
f
= fn f c
= 300.015 300
f
= 15 kHz
b)
fpeak
fpeak
peak
peak
RMS:
frms
frms
rms
rms
c)
= f (En / Ec)
= 15 kHz (0.2 / 4)
= 7.5 kHz
= Vn / Vc
= 0.2 / 4
= 0.05 rad
= fpeak / 2
= 7.5 kHz / 2
= 5.3 kHz
= peak / 2
= 0.05 / 2
= 0.035 rad
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