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CHAPTER CHAPTER Modulation Modulation
Transcript
Page 1: Modulation

CHAPTER CHAPTER

ModulationModulation

Page 2: Modulation

Chapter Objectives

• Explain amplitude, frequency and phase shift modulation

• Give an example of a modulation technique used in modems

• Discuss modem standards– Communication, compression etc.

Continued

Page 3: Modulation

Continuation of Chapter Objectives

• Differentiate between bps and Baud that are units used for measuring communication speed

• Describe analog-to-digital modulation• Explain digital-to-digital interface• Summarize the different types of signal

conversions– Digital-to-analog, analog-to-digital, analog-

to-analog and digital-to-digital

Page 4: Modulation

Chapter Modules

• Amplitude modulation• Frequency and phase shift modulation• Modems and modulation• FM modulation in modems• Speed of modulated signals• Analog-to-digital modulation• Digital-to-digital interfacing

Page 5: Modulation

Overview

• Digital-to-analog modulation– Computer-to-telephone interface

• Analog-to-digital modulation– Digitization of audio

• Digital-to-digital interface– Computer-to-ISDN interface

Page 6: Modulation

Modulation

Amplitude Modulation

Page 7: Modulation

Overview of Modulation

Computer Modem

Serial linkRS -232

PhoneLineRJ-11

Digital Analog

Page 8: Modulation

Amplitude Modulation (AM)

10

10

Amp. 1 Amp. 2

1 = Amp. 10 = Amp. 2

A B

Page 9: Modulation

Characteristics of Amplitude Modulation

• Amplitude of the analog signal is modulated

• One amplitude represents a 0• Another amplitude represents a 1• Frequency remains unchanged in both

cases• Signals that are modulated at one end

are demodulated at the other end

Page 10: Modulation

Usage

• Amplitude is susceptible to interference– This technique in not normally used in

modems

• A variation of this technique is used in AM radio transmission– Analog-to-analog modulation takes

place

Page 11: Modulation

AM and Radio Transmission

Modulated Amplitude

Voice

CarrierWave

Page 12: Modulation

End of ModuleEnd of Module

Page 13: Modulation

Module

Frequency Modulation

Page 14: Modulation

Frequency Modulation (FM)

10

10

Freq. 1 Freq. 2

1 = Frequency F10 = Frequency F2

Page 15: Modulation

Characteristics of Frequency Modulation

• Frequency is modulated • Frequency f1

– Represents 1• Frequency f2

– Represents 0• The amplitude remains unaltered

in both cases

Page 16: Modulation

Usage• Variations in frequency are easy to detect

– They are less susceptible to interference

• FM and variations of this technique are used in modems

• Easy to implement full duplex transmission under FM

• A variation of the FM technique described here is used in FM radio transmission

Page 17: Modulation

Use of FM in Early Day Modems

F10

F21

F30

F41

VoiceBand-Width

Full-duplex CommunicationA B

Page 18: Modulation

Modulation in Modern Day Modems

• Modern day modems may not use the FM technique for modulation

• They may be using a technique known as Phase Shift Modulation (or Phase Shift Keying)

Page 19: Modulation

End of ModuleEnd of Module

Page 20: Modulation

Module

Phase Shift Keying (PSK) Modulation

Page 21: Modulation

Phase of an Analog Signal

YStrength

XTime Frame

0 90 180 270 360

Page 22: Modulation

The Concept of Phase Shift

90 degrees phase shift

180 degrees phase shift

0 90

0 180

Page 23: Modulation

Phase Modulation Technique

10

90 Degrees phase shift

0 Degree phase shift

•This is also known as phase shift keying.

Page 24: Modulation

Characteristics of Phase Shift Modulation

• Phase is modulated• Phase shift of 0 represents a 0• Phase shift of 90 degrees represents a 1• Both amplitude and frequency remain

unaltered is both cases• Also known as Phase Shift Keying, it is

used in a number of modern modems as well

Page 25: Modulation

End of ModuleEnd of Module

Page 26: Modulation

Module

FM Modulation in Modems

Page 27: Modulation

Module Objectives

• Explain the basic concept of modem communication

• Provide an example of frequency modulation used in modems

• Discuss the importance of call mode setting– Call mode and receive mode settings

Page 28: Modulation

Basic Concepts of Modem Communication

F10

F21

F30

F41

VoiceBand-Width

Full-duplex CommunicationA B

Page 29: Modulation

FM Details

• Different frequencies are used for transmission

• At node A– F1 for 0– F2 for 1

• At node B– F3 for 0– F4 for 1

Page 30: Modulation

Call and Receive Modes

• Setting for communication– Set one side on call mode– Set the other side on receive mode– The above would ensures proper

assignment of frequencies

Page 31: Modulation

Mode Setting Rule

• Calling mainframes or on-line services– Set the calling computer on call mode

• In general– Set the home computer on the call mode

• Fortunately, in a number of cases, the modems poll and set themselves dynamically for communication between the receiver and the sender

Page 32: Modulation

End of ModuleEnd of Module

Page 33: Modulation

Module

Terms Used in Measuring the Communication speed

Page 34: Modulation

Overview• In general, the terms used for measuring speed

are bps and Baud• The former is being used more widely than the

latter• bps is the accurate measure of the speed of

communication • In the past, Baud was being used interchangeable

with bps– Both are not interchangeable

• Only in certain circumstances they amount to the same

Page 35: Modulation

Definition of bps and Baud

• bps represents the number of bits transmitted per second

• Baud represents the number of times the signal changes its state during a given period of time

Page 36: Modulation

Example Where bps and Baud Represent the Same

10

1 Second

F1 F2

bps = 1Baud = 1

Page 37: Modulation

Example Where bps and Baud are Different

00

01 10 11

bps = 2Baud = 1

1 second

Page 38: Modulation

Frequency Representation

00 1

01 2

10 3

11 4

Bits Frequency

Page 39: Modulation

In Summary

• bps measures the speed of communication correctly in bits per second

• Baud indicates he number of times the state of a signal changes in one second

Page 40: Modulation

End of ModuleEnd of Module

Page 41: Modulation

Module

Modem Standards

Page 42: Modulation

Modem Standardization

• The International body that standardizes the modulation technique is known as the ITU

• ITU is also responsible for setting standards pertaining to:– Error correction– Data compression

Page 43: Modulation

Sample ITU Specifications

• Modulation – ITU V.34

• Error correction – ITU V.42– MNP 5

• Data compression – ITU V.42 bis– MNP 2 to 4

Page 44: Modulation

Bell Standard and its Implications

• At 1200 bps and below there were two standards– CCITT (ITU at present)– Bell

• A Bell modem cannot communicate with a CCITT modem

• Bell standard at that time was used predominantly in the US

• Today, all modems fall under the ITU specifications

Page 45: Modulation

Sample Protocols and Speed

• V.92 for 56,000 bps• V.90 for 56,000 bps• V.34 for 28,800 bps• V.32 bis for 14,400 bps• V.32 for 9,600 bps• A high speed modem could also operate

at the lower speed– High speed modems can thus communicate

with a low speed modems

Page 46: Modulation

A Note on the Protocol Used in the Faster 56K

Modems

• When the 56K modems were first introduced there were two competing standards

• One was the X2 standard proposed by US Robotics that is now part of 3Com

• The competing protocol was knows as the Kflex56 standard– A joint effort between Lucent and

Rockwell

Page 47: Modulation

ITU Standard for 56K Modems

• Both standards have now been superceded by the ITU V.90 standard

• The vendors now produce modems that operate under the ITU V.90 protocol

• The vendors also offer upgrades to the older X2 and Kflex modems so that they could operate under V.90

Page 48: Modulation

In Summary

• ITU specified protocols with respect to modems exist for the following.– Modulation– Error correction– Data compression

• Different protocols apply to different speeds of communication

• A high speed modem can communicate with a low speed modem

Page 49: Modulation

End of ModuleEnd of Module

Page 50: Modulation

Module

Analog-to-Digital Mapping

Page 51: Modulation

An Overview of Analog-to-Digital Modulation

• Representation of analog signals by digital signals is known as analog-to-digital modulation

• Often the digitized information is further coded into binary form for computer processing

• Sample applications include the encoding of audio for computer processing

Page 52: Modulation

Steps Involved in the Representation of Analog Signals by Digital Signals

Analog Signals

PAM or PDM

PCM

ComputerProcessing

* See earlier slides for details on PAM and PCM

Digitize

Encode

Page 53: Modulation

Modulation Techniques

• Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM)• Pulse Code Modulation (PCM)• Pulse Duration Modulation (PDM)

Page 54: Modulation

Pulse Duration Modulation

16

Note: pulse duration is proportional to The height of the analog wave

5

110 001 101

Page 55: Modulation

Salient Points of Pulse Duration Modulation

• Sample the analog signal at predetermined time intervals– Sampling rate

• Generate digital pulses of duration proportional to the amplitude of the analog signal at the sampling point

• Encode the information into binary form

Page 56: Modulation

Reference

• More information on Asynchronous Transmission

Page 57: Modulation

End of ModuleEnd of Module

Page 58: Modulation

Digital-to-Digital Interfacing

Module

Page 59: Modulation

Module Objectives

• Explain the difference between signal modulation (conversion) and digital-to-digital signal transformation

• Explain the concept of digital-to-digital interfacing using ISDN as an example

• Provide a summary of the different modulation processes

Page 60: Modulation

Overview

• Analog-to-Digital signal conversion requires modulation

• Digital-to-Digital interfacing– Requires conversion and not modulation– In this case, digital signals are converted from

one digital format to another digital format– Hence, the need for an interface unit even

though the signals at both ends are represented in digital form

• An example is the Computer-to-ISDN link

Page 61: Modulation

Digital-to-Digital Interfacing

ComputerISDN

Adapter

DigitalRS232C

Adapter ConvertsFrom Computer ToISDN Format

DigitalISDNPhoneLine

Page 62: Modulation

Summary of Modulation

• Digital-to-analog– FM used in modems

• Analog-to-digital– PAM and PCM used in the digitization of audio

• Analog-to-analog– AM used in radio transmission

• Digital-to-digital– This is not a modulation process– Used by the ISDN interface to the computer– Used in DSL communication

Page 63: Modulation

End of ModulationEnd of Modulation

Page 64: Modulation

END OF CHAPTEREND OF CHAPTER


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