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Nyquist Criterion and DFT Sampling

Nyquist Criterion and DFT Sampling: Understanding the Connection 1. Nyquist Sampling Theorem (Continuous-Time Signals) The Nyquist theorem states that to perfectly reconstruct a continuous-time signal from its samples, the sampling frequency f s must satisfy: f s ≥ 2 f max Where f max is the maximum frequency present in the signal. Applies to continuous-time (analog) signals Ensures no aliasing (no loss of frequency information) The minimum f s = 2 f max is called the Nyquist rate 2. Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) Sampling For a discrete signal x[n] of length N , the DFT is defined as: X[k] = Σ n=0 N-1 x[n] e -j 2Ï€ kn / N ,   k = 0,1,...,N-1 Applies to discrete-time signals Requires N frequency samples to fully represent a signal of length N Assumes the signal was correctly sampled (Nyquist already satisfied) 3. Why Nyquist and DFT are Not Contradictory Concept Domain Purpose Nyquist Continuous-time Ensures ...

Noise Figure Explained

Noise Figure (NF) Noise Figure tells us how much noise a system adds to a signal. \[ F = \frac{SNR_{in}}{SNR_{out}}, \quad NF = 10 \log_{10}(F) \] Lower NF = Better receiver Higher NF = More noise added Example 1 (dB Form) Given: Input SNR = 20 dB Output SNR = 15 dB Step 1: \[ NF = SNR_{in} - SNR_{out} \] \[ NF = 20 - 15 = 5 \, dB \] Final Answer: NF = 5 dB Meaning: The receiver reduces SNR by 5 dB due to added noise. Example 2 (Linear Form) Given: Input SNR = 100 Output SNR = 25 Step 1: \[ F = \frac{100}{25} = 4 \] Step 2: \[ NF = 10 \log_{10}(4) \approx 6 \, dB \] Final Answer: NF ≈ 6 dB Summary Noise Figure = Loss in SNR caused by the system \[ NF (dB) = SNR_{in} - SNR_{out} \] NF measures receiver performance Lower NF ⇒ Better system Higher NF ⇒ More noise added Noise Figure determines how well a receiver can detect weak signals.

Eye Diagram in Digital Communication

Eye Diagram in Digital Communication An eye diagram is one of the most powerful visualization tools used in digital communication to evaluate signal quality. It provides a time-domain representation of how a signal behaves over multiple symbol intervals. 1. What is an Eye Diagram? An eye diagram is formed by overlapping multiple segments of a received signal, each of duration equal to one symbol period \(T\). Mathematically, if the received signal is \( r(t) \), then the eye diagram plots: \[ r(t + kT), \quad k = 0,1,2,\dots \] All these shifted waveforms are superimposed on the same time axis. The resulting pattern resembles an eye , hence the name. 2. How is it Generated? Take the received signal Divide it into segments of length \(T\) Overlay all segments on top of each other This is equivalent to observing: \[ y(t) = \sum_{k} r(t + kT) \] (in visualization form, not literal summation) 3. Key Features of an Eye Diagram ...

Modulating Amplitude Affects FM Bandwidth

How Modulating Amplitude Affects FM Bandwidth (Mathematical Derivation) 1. FM Signal Definition s(t) = A c cos(2Ï€ f c t + φ(t)) Where the phase is: φ(t) = 2Ï€ k f ∫ m(t) dt k f = frequency sensitivity (Hz/Volt) m(t) = modulating signal 2. Sinusoidal Modulating Signal m(t) = A m cos(2Ï€ f m t) Integrating: ∫ m(t) dt = (A m / 2Ï€ f m ) sin(2Ï€ f m t) Substitute into phase: φ(t) = (k f A m / f m ) sin(2Ï€ f m t) 3. Modulation Index β = k f A m / f m FM signal becomes: s(t) = A c cos(2Ï€ f c t + β sin(2Ï€ f m t)) 4. Frequency Deviation Δf = k f A m Δf ∝ A m 5. FM Spectrum (Bessel Expansion) s(t) = A c Σ J n (β) cos(2Ï€(f c + n f m )t) J n (β) = Bessel functions Number of significant sidebands depends on β As β increases, more sidebands become significant → wider spectrum. 6. Carson’...

Full-scale Deflection with Example

  Shunt Resistance Concept Core Idea Your meter can only safely carry a very small current: 300 μA is its full-scale deflection (FSD) limit. But you want to measure a much larger current: 5 A. So you cannot send all 5 A through the meter — it would burn out. What do we do instead? We use a low-resistance shunt connected in parallel with the meter. Small current → through meter Large remaining current → through shunt Key Principle Both meter and shunt are in parallel, so: Voltage across meter = Voltage across shunt How current splits Meter takes: 300 μA Shunt takes: almost entire 5 A Why it works From Ohm’s Law: I = V / R Meter has higher resistance (75 Ω) → less current Shunt has very small resistance (~0.0045 Ω) → more current flows Big Picture Protecting the meter Extending its range Turning a microamp device into a 5 A ammeter Summary A shunt resistor allows a small-current me...

Overmodulation & Distortion in AM

Overmodulation in AM and How It Causes Distortion 1. AM Signal Equation s(t) = A c [1 + μ m(t)] cos(2Ï€ f c t) A c = carrier amplitude m(t) = normalized modulating signal (|m(t)| ≤ 1) μ = modulation index 2. Modulation Index μ = A m / A c - Normal AM: 0 < μ ≤ 1 → no distortion - Overmodulation: μ > 1 → distortion occurs 3. Envelope and Overmodulation A(t) = A c [1 + μ m(t)] - For undistorted AM: 1 + μ m(t) ≥ 0 at all times - If μ > 1: 1 + μ m(t) < 0 at negative peaks → carrier flips Example: Let m(t) = cos(2Ï€ f m t), A c = 1 V, μ = 1.2 Minimum envelope: A min = A c [1 - 1.2] = -0.2 V Negative amplitude → envelope crosses zero → 180° phase flip 4. Mathematical Consequence -A c cos(θ) = A c cos(θ + Ï€) This phase reversal is what causes distortion in the demodulated signal. 5. Instantaneous AM Signal s(t) ...

Logical Fallacies Explained

  Logical Fallacies Logical Fallacies 1. Ad Hominem (Attack on the person) Instead of addressing the argument, the person attacks the individual. Example: "He’s not a good scholar, so his argument is wrong." 2. Ad Misericordiam (Appeal to pity) Uses sympathy instead of logic. Example: "Please pass me, I had a tough time." 3. Ad Populum (Appeal to popularity) Claims something is true because many people believe it. Example: "Everyone uses this book, so it must be the best." 4. Ad Baculum (Appeal to force or threat) Uses fear or threats to make someone agree. Example: "Accept this theory, or you’ll fail the exam." 5. Ad Verecundiam (Appeal to authority) Relies on authority instead of evidence. Example: "A famous professor said it, so it must be true." 6. Straw Man Fallacy Misrepresenting someone’s argument to ma...

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