Carrier Modulation in Digital Communication Systems Xavier Fernando Ryerson Communications Lab (RCL)

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Presentation transcript:

Carrier Modulation in Digital Communication Systems Xavier Fernando Ryerson Communications Lab (RCL)

Why Carrier Modulation? Until now we have been looking at baseband communications The information is sampled, quantized pulse coded and transmitted in baseband However, baseband transmission is not suitable in many situations Carrier modulation is needed in these cases Fe examples are listed in the next few slides

Wireless Communications The air-interface is shared by many different users & services Each service has a certain allocated frequency Carrier modulation is needed to occupy only the given spectrum Examples: FM Radio: 88 – 108 MHz WLAN – 2.4 or 5 GHz Cellular Radio: MHz GPS: 1215 – 1240 MHz

Digital Telephony/Cable Modem Many of you may have Rogers Digital Phone & Cable Modem The voice and internet data is modulated on a carrier frequency (not overlapping with TV Bands) and transmitted via cable in addition TV Channels using QPSK or 16QAM modulation TV Bands: MHz, 180 – 216 MHz and MHz

Up Conversion Carrier modulation up converts the signal to a suitable band Baseband  Bandpass Also note the bandwidth doubles

Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM) Carrier Modulation enables sharing a common channel by number of users/services