Modulation is the process of varying a carrier signal in order to use that signal to convey information. The three key parameters of a sinusoid are its amplitude, its phase and its frequency, all of which can be modified in accordance with an information signal to obtain the modulated signal. There are several reasons to modulate a signal before transmission in a medium. These include the ability of different users sharing a medium (multiple access), and making the signal properties physically compatible with the propagation medium. A device that performs modulation is known as a modulator and a device that performs the inverse operation of demodulation is known as a demodulator. A device that can do both operations is a modem (a contraction of the two terms).
In digital modulation, the changes in the signal are chosen from a fixed list (the modulation alphabet) each entry of which conveys a different possible piece of information (a symbol). The alphabet is often conveniently represented on a constellation diagram.
In analog modulation, the change is applied continuously in response to the data signal. The modulation may be applied to various aspects of the signal as the lists below indicate.
Modulation is generally performed to overcome signal transmission issues such as to allow
Carrier signals are usually high frequency electromagnetic waves.
Any form of digital modulation necessarily uses a finite number of distinct signals to represent digital data.
These are the general steps used by the modulator to transmit data:
At the receiver, the demodulator
As is common to all digital communication systems, the design of both the modulator and demodulator must be done simultaneously. Digital modulation schemes are possible because the transmitter-receiver pair have prior knowledge of how data is encoded and represented in the communications system. In all digital communication systems, both the modulator at the transmitter and the demodulator at the receiver are structured so that they perform inverse operations.
The principal classes of modulation are:
MSK and GMSK are particular cases of continuous phase modulation (CPM). Indeed, MSK is a particular case of the sub-family of CPM known as continuous phase-frequency-shift keying (CPFSK) which is defined by a rectangular frequency pulse (i.e. a linearly increasing phase pulse) of one symbol-time duration (total response signalling).
Often incorrectly referred to as a modulation scheme, orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) usually takes advantage of one of the digital techniques. It is also known as discrete multitone (DMT). When OFDM is used in conjunction with channel coding techniques, it is described as Coded orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (COFDM). OFDM is strictly a channel access method and not a modulation scheme.
Communication theory | Radio modulation modes
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"Modulation".
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