From charlesreid1

Chapter 5: Radio Signals and Equipment

Section 5.1: Signal Review

  • a radio signal at one frequency, at constant power, is CW - continuous wave
  • adding information to a signal (via changes in frequency, phase angle, or amplitude) is modulation
  • the method of modulation is asignal's mode
  • an unmodulated signal carries no information
  • to recover information from a signal is demodulation
  • voice mode/phone mode - voice/speech is information
  • data mode/digital mode - data is information
  • analog - information can be understood by human
  • digital - information can be understood by computer

AM

  • amplitude modulation
  • information contained int he signal's envelope, or maximum instantaneous power for each cycle
  • AM signals have a carrier and 2 sidebands
  • AM signals with the carrier removed are double sideband DSB
  • AM signals with one sideband and the carrier removed are single sideband SSB

angle modulation

  • varying freq to add info is frequency modulation FM
  • amt that signal frequency varies is called deviation
  • phase angle can be varied with respect to reference phase, this is phase modulation
  • FM/PM can be decoded with same circuits
  • FM: changes amount of time signal takes to make a 360 degree cycle

PM - changes relative phase difference between signal and reference phase

  • FM and PM signals have one carrier, multiple sidebands
  • FM/PM are constant power (modulated or not)

bandwidth

  • definition of bandwidth - width outside of which the average power of the signal is attenuated by 26 dB below the mean power
  • typical bandwidth values:
    • TV - 6 MHz
    • AM - 6 kHz
    • FM - 5-16 kHz
    • SSB - 2-3 kHz
    • Digital - 50-300 Hz
    • CW - 100-300 Hz

Section 5.1 Summary

  • The process that changes the phase angle of an RF wave to convey information is phase modulation
  • the process that changes instantaneous frequency of RF wave to convey information is frequency modulation
  • Instantaneous power level of RF signal used to convey information in amplitude modulation AM
  • The phone emission with the narrowest bandwidth is SSB single sideband

Section 5.2: Radio's Building Bloccks

Oscillators, mixers, multipliers, modulators

Oscillators:

  • produce a pure sine wave, as close to 1 frequency as possible
  • oscillator has two parts:
    • amplifier to increase gain
    • feedback circuit to route some output back into input
  • if product of amplifier gain and amt of feedback are > 1, circuit's output will be self-sustaining - this is called oscillation
  • oscillator output frequency can be fixed or varied

fixed frequency oscillators FFOs: 3 types

  • RC (resistors/capacitors)
  • LC (inductors/capacitors)
  • crystal (acts like LC, orders of magnitude more precise)

variable frequency oscillators VFOs: 3 types

  • LC circuit with variable capacitor
  • PLL phase locked loop
  • DDS direct digital synthesizer (software-controlled, has stability of crystal oscillator)

Mixers:

  • changing frequency of signal is key function in RX/TX
  • this is what mixer does
    • in: f1, f2
    • out: f1 +/- f2
  • mixers combine 2 frequencies f1 and f2
  • combine to form f1 + f2 and f1 - f2
  • heterodyning - the mixing of 2 frequencies (f1 +/- f2)
  • input f1 is called RF input (transmitted signal)
  • input f2 is called local oscillator LO (locally-generated reference signal)
  • outputs from mixer are called mixing products

Multipliers:

  • this unit creates a harmonic of the input frequency (multiplies by an integer)
  • low-frequency oscillators are easier/smaller to build, so run low-frequency oscillator signal through a multiplier to make a VHF/UHF signal

Modulators:

  • modulators add information to a carrier signal
  • information added to a signal as amplitude, frequency, or phase variations
  • input 1 is carrier input f1
  • input 2 is modulating input f2
  • output is f1 modulated by f2

Amplitude Modulators:

  • first created by varying the power supply voltage of a CW signal
  • as voltage changes, amplituded of output signal's envelope follows along
  • also called plate modulation, or drain modulation, or collector modulation
    • plate modulation: voltage being varied connects to a vacuum tube
    • drain modulation - voltage being varied connect to transistor's drain
    • collector modulation - voltage being varied connects to a transistor's collector
  • modulation transformer then adds/subtracts amplified voice signal to power supply voltage
  • AM circuits cannot generate SSB signals
  • AM, double sideband can be generated by balanced modulator
  • balanced modulator:
    • input 1: carrier signal f1
    • input 2: modulating signal f2
    • output signal: double sideband f1 +/- f2
    • the pairs of sidebands, above and below, are due to heterodyning, f1 +/- f2
  • DSB - double sideband requires a balanced modulator, so the carrier frequency will cancel out
  • AM - requires an unbalanced modulator, so the carrier frequency will survive heterodyning

Frequency and Phase Modulators:

  • FM - frequency of modulated signal changes with modulating signal's amplitude
  • PM - frequency of modulated signal (deviation of signal) is proportional to modulating signal's amplitude and frequency
  • FM/PM sound the same, demodulated with same circuit
  • angle modulation performed with a reactance modulator
  • two types of reactance modulators:
    • FM reactance modulators
    • PM reactance modulators
  • FM reactance modulator: amp feeds into reactance modulator, output is frequency modulated output
  • PM reactance modulator: amp and fixed-frequency oscillator feed into reactance modulator, output is phase modulated output

Section 5.2 Summary

  • if a 3 kHz LSB signal has a carrier frequency of 7.178 MHz, it occupies 7.175-7.178 MHz
  • if using 3 kHz USB signal on 20 m, how close to edge of band should carrier signal be? 3 kHz below edge of band
  • basic components of a sine wave oscillator are an amplifier and a feedback circuit with a filter
  • frequency of LC oscillator can vary depending on component ratings - individual inductances and capacitances
  • a transceiver controlled by a direct digital synthesizer is that you have stability of a crystal, with variable frequency
  • a reactance modulator connected to RF amplifier stage generates phase modulation or frequency modulation
  • carrier suppression in SSB phone - the advantage over AM is that transmitter power can be used more efficiently (narrower bandwidth)
  • the receiver stage that combines a 14.250 MHz signal with a 13.795 MHz oscillator to produce a 455 kHz intermediate frequency is a mixer (heterodyning)
  • the mixing of two signals is called heterodyning
  • in a VHF/UHF transmitter (FM), the stage that generates a harmonic of a low-frequency signal is the multiplier

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