Introduction To Electronic Communications
Introduction To Electronic Communications
Introduction To Electronic Communications
waves was
originated by:
A. Marconi
B. Bell
C. Maxwell
D. Hertz
The transmission
of radio waves was
first done by:
A. Marconi
B. Bell
C. Maxwell
D. Hertz
A complete communication
system must include:
A. a transmitter and receiver
B. a transmitter, a receiver,
and a channel
C. a transmitter, a receiver,
and a spectrum analyzer
D. a multiplexer, a
demultiplexer, and a
channel
A.
B.
C.
D.
The bandwidth
required for a
modulated carrier
on:
thedepends
carrier frequency
the signal-to-noise
ratio
the signal-plus-noise
to noise ratio
the baseband
sub-channeling
signal switching
SINAD
multiplexing
The collection of
sinusoidal frequencies
present in a modulated
carrier is called its:
A. frequency-domain
representation
B. Fourier series
C. spectrum
D. all of the above
Noise in a communication
system originates in:
A. the sender
B. the receiver
C. the channel
D. all of the above
Thermal noise is
generated in:
a. transistors and diodes
b. resistors
c. copper wire
d. all of the above
dependent on
temperature and its
frequency content is
spread equally
throughout the usable
spectrum. It is also called
Brownian noise, Johnson
noise, White noise, and
Gaussian noise.
Resistive components are
the primary source of
In electronic devices,
shot noise is due to shot
effect, caused by random
variations in the arrival of
electrons or holes at the
output electrode of an
amplifying device and
appearing as a randomly
varying noise current
superimposed on the
output.
required to produce 10 uV of
noise in a receiver with an
input impedance of 75 ohms,
resistive and a noise power
bandwidth of 200 kHz (these
values are typical of FM
broadcast receivers.) What
must the current through the
a. 230be?
mA
diode
b. 276 mA
c. 320 mA
d. 440 mA
In pink noise - a
reduction of 50% (or
6dB ) of energy as
you go up one
octave
Signal-to-Noise ratio is
calculated as:
a. signal voltage divided by
noise voltage
b. signal power divided by
noise power
c. first add the signal power to
the noise power, then divide
by noise power
SINAD is a measurement
that can be used for any
radio communication device
to look at the degradation
of the signal by unwanted
or extraneous signals
including noise and
distortion.
Power Gain
Noise Factor
10
25
30
IDENTIFICAT
ION
One-way communications
simplex
is called
_______.
Simultaneous two-way
communications is called
full duplex
______________.
Transmission Modes
Generally, the mode of
communication can be divided
into 3 types :
Simplex System: the system
capable of sending information in
one direction only. (e.g. TV & radio
broadcasting) Also called receiveonly, transmit-only, or one-way
only lines.
Half-duplex System: the system
capable to carry information in
both direction, but only one
50
Full-duplex System:
Information can be carried in
both direction at the same
time. The 2 directions of
information travel are
independent of each other.
(e.g. ordinary/mobile phone
systems, computer systems)
Also called two-way
simultaneous, duplex or bothway lines.
Full/full duplex System:
51
The process of
transmitting two or more
information signals
simultaneously over the
same channel is called
multiplexing
_______________.
Continuous voice or
video signals are
baseband
referred to as ___________
signals.
Recovering information
from a carrier is known
as detection
_____________.
Transmission of graphical
information over the
telephone network is
accomplished by
facsimile
_________________.
Measuring physical
conditions at some
remote location and
transmitting this data for
analysis is the process of
telemetry
__________.
Receiving
electromagnetic
emissions from stars is
astronomy
called radio ____________.
A personal
communications hobby
for individualsham
is ________
radio.
A frequency of 27MHz
has a wavelength of
approximately
11m
______________.
EM spectrum
ELF 30-300
VF 300-3
VLF 3-30 navy/submarines
aeronautical and marine,
LF 30-300 subcarriers
MF 300-3 AM
HF 3-30 amateur radio, CB radio
VH
30-300 FM, TV (channels 2-13)
UH
F
300-3 TV (channels 14-83)
SH
F
3-30 satellites and radars
F
EH
satellites and some
30-300 specialized radars
0.7F
IR
8000 -4000
100m
VISIBLE
ELF
VF
VLF
LF
MF
HF
VH
UH
F
SH
F
F
EH
F
30-300
300-3
3-30 Myriametric
30-300 Kilometric
300-3 Hectometric
3-30 Decametric
30-300 Metric
300-3 Decimetric
3-30 Centimetric
30-300 Millimetric
My
Kitten
Has
D
Most
Decent
S...
mell
Television broadcasting
occurs in which
frequency bands?
VHF and UHF
The range of
frequencies used for
AM?
535-1605 kHz
The range of
frequencies used for
FM?
88-108 MHz
Electromagnetic waves
produced primarily by
heat are called _________
infrared
rays.
One __________ is
micron
equivalent to onemillionth of a meter.
IR Classifications
Long infrared 0.01 mm to
1000
nm
Short infrared 1000 nm to
700 nm
A unit of length
equivalent to 1 x 10
-10
meter.
Angstrom ()
The range of
wavelength of visible
8000 (red)
light to
is 4000
(violet)
________________________.
What is the
threshold of
hearing?
A. 0 dB SPL
B. 10 dB SPL
C. 120 dB SPL
D. None of the
choices
The sound of
leaves
rustling is 10
dB SPL
What is the
threshold of
pain?
A. 0 dB SPL
B. 10 dB SPL
C. 120 dB SPL
D. None of the
choices
What is the
frequency of
visible light
A. 0.3 PHz to 3
PHz
B. 0.4 PHz to 4
PHz
C. 0.5 PHz to 5
Atmospheric noise is
insignificant above
A. 1 MHz
B. 30 MHz
C. 50 MHz
D. 80 MHz
1 Neper is equal to
A. 2.232 dB
B. 8.686 dB
C. 5.232 dB
D. 10.454 dB
The fundamental
frequency of
typical human
voice
500 Hz
The bandwidth to
propagate voicequality analog
3 kHz
The bandwidth to
propagate voicequality digital
telephone
32 kHz
96
Uncorrelated noise
Two General Categories of Uncorrelated Noise :
1. External noise noise that generated outside the device or
circuit.
Atmospheric noise
- naturally occurring electrical disturbances that originate within
earths atmosphere such as lightning.
- also known as static electricity.
Extraterrestrial noise
- consists of electrical signal that originate from outside earths
atmosphere and therefore also known as deep-space noise.
- 2 categories of extraterrestrial noise.
i solar noise noise that generated directly from the suns
heat.
Sunspot activity follows a cyclic pattern that repeats every
11 years.
ii cosmic noise / black-body noise noise that is distributed
throughout the galaxies.
Man-made noise
- noise that is produced by mankind.
- source : spark-producing mechanism (commutators
in electrical
97
motors, automobile ignition
Uncorrelated noise
2. Internal noise noise that generated within
the device or circuit.
Shot noise
- described mathematically by W. Schottky and is
sometimes called transistor noise
Transit-time noise
- irregular, random variation due to any modification
to a stream of carriers as they pass from the input
to the output of a device.
- this noise become noticeable when the time delay
takes for a carrier to propagate through a device is
excessive.
98
Correlated noise
A form of internal noise that is correlated to the
signal and cannot be present in a circuit unless
there is a signal.
Produced by a nonlinear amplification resulting in
nonlinear distortion.
There are 2 types of nonlinear distortion that
create unwanted frequencies that interfere with
the signal and degrade the performance :
1. Harmonic distortion
occurs when unwanted harmonics of a signal
are produced through nonlinear amplification.
harmonics are integer multiples of the original
signal. The original signal is the first harmonic
(fundamental harmonic), a frequency two
times the fundamental frequency is the
99
second harmonic, three times is the
third
Correlated noise
1. Harmonic distortion
distortion measurements :
- Nth harmonic distortion = ratio of the rms amplitude of
Nth harmonic to the rms amplitude of the fundamental.
- Total Harmonic Distortion (THD)
%THD
where
vhigher
vhigher
vfundamental
100
v 2 2 v 33 v 4 4 .... vn 2
100
Correlated noise
2. Intermodulation distortion
intermodulation distortion is the generation of
unwanted sum and difference frequencies
produced when two or more signals mix in a
nonlinear device (cross products).
unwanted !
101
1. Impulse noise
characterized by high amplitude peaks of short duration (sudden burst of irregularly
shaped pulses) in the total noise spectrum.
common source of impulse noise : transient produced from electromechanical
switches (relays and solenoids), electric motors, appliances, electric lights, power
lines, poor-quality solder joints and lightning.
2. Interference
electrical interference occurs when information signals from one source produces
frequencies that fall outside their allocated bandwidth and interfere with information
signal from another source.
most occurs in the radio frequency spectrum.
102