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Frequency Spectrum of Convolution Explained

Frequency Spectrum of Convolution We are given two signals a(t) and b(t) . The output signal is the convolution: $$y(t) = a(t) * b(t)$$ Using the convolution property of the Fourier Transform: $$Y(f) = A(f)B(f)$$ 1. Spectrum of Signal a(t) The frequencies present in a(t) are: $$f = ..., -30,-10,0,10,30,... \text{ kHz}$$ Mathematically: $$A(f)=\sum_{k} A_k\,\delta(f-10k)$$ 2. Spectrum of Signal b(t) The frequencies present in b(t) are: $$f = -4, 0, 4 \text{ kHz}$$ Mathematically: $$B(f)=B_{-1}\delta(f+4)+B_0\delta(f)+B_1\delta(f-4)$$ 3. Frequency Spectrum of Convolution Since $$Y(f)=A(f)B(f)$$ Substituting: $$ Y(f)=\left(\sum_k A_k\delta(f-10k)\right) \left[B_{-1}\delta(f+4)+B_0\delta(f)+B_1\delta(f-4)\right] $$ Using the property: $$\delta(f-a)\delta(f-b)=0 \quad \text{if } a \neq b$$ Only frequencies that appear in both spectra survive. 4. Checking Common Frequencies A(f) Frequencies B(f) Frequencies Match -30 -4,0,4 No -10...

When Is Envelope Detection Possible? AM, PAM, and DSB-SC Explained

Carrier Sign Problem in Modulation The carrier sign problem means that an envelope detector cannot determine whether the message signal is positive or negative because it only detects signal magnitude. Envelope detectors measure amplitude but cannot detect phase inversion . 1. DSB-SC (Double Sideband Suppressed Carrier) The transmitted signal is: s(t) = m(t) cos(ω c t) Where: m(t) = message signal cos(ω c t) = carrier signal Case 1: m(t) > 0 s(t) = +m(t) cos(ω c t) Case 2: m(t) < 0 s(t) = -m(t) cos(ω c t) When the message becomes negative, the carrier is flipped by 180° phase . However, the envelope detector only follows the amplitude and produces: |m(t)| Therefore the original message cannot be recovered correctly. This is called the carrier sign problem . Conclusion: Envelope detection is not practical for DSB-SC. Coherent detection must be used instead. 2. AM (Amplitude Modulation) The AM signal is: s(t) = [A + m(...

Envelope Detector Online Simulator

General Envelope Detector Simulator Modulation Type: AM (with carrier) PAM Message Frequency (fm): Hz Carrier Frequency (fc): Hz Carrier Amplitude (Ac): Modulation Index (m = Am / Ac): Envelope Detection and Amplitude-Based Modulations Envelope detectors are fundamental for amplitude-based modulations because they exploit the fact that the instantaneous amplitude of the carrier encodes the message signal . 1. Why Envelope Detection Works In amplitude modulation (AM), the modulated signal has the form: s(t) = [A_c + m(t)] cos(2Ï€ f_c t) A_c is the carrier amplitude m(t) is the message signal f_c is the carrier frequency The envelope of this waveform is: Envelope = |A_c + m(t)| . An envelope detector (e.g., a diode + RC circuit) follows the peaks of the ca...

Free-Space Optical (FSO) Communication

Free-Space Optical (FSO) Communication Free-space optical (FSO) communication entails the transmission of modulated optical signals through an unguided medium, typically the atmosphere, from a transmitter to a receiver. Conceptually, this can be analogized to emitting a collimated optical beam over a distance and reconstructing the information at the remote receiver , with the received signal being influenced by both deterministic and stochastic propagation effects. 1. Received Power and Link Budget The received optical power \(P_r\) can be expressed in terms of the transmitted power \(P_t\) and the cumulative link losses: $$ P_r = P_t \cdot L_{\text{geo}} \cdot L_{\text{atm}} \cdot L_{\text{opt}} $$ Where: \(L_{\text{geo}}\) accounts for geometric spreading \(L_{\text{atm}}\) accounts for atmospheric attenuation \(L_{\text{opt}}\) encompasses optical coupling and alignment losses 2. Free-Spa...

PIN Diodes and Avalanche Photodiodes (APDs)

PIN Photodiodes and Avalanche Photodiodes (APDs) Here’s a clear, structured explanation of PIN photodiodes and APDs , focusing on what they are, how they work, and why they are used, especially in optical and underwater visible light communication (UVLC) systems. 1. PIN Photodiode What does PIN mean? P–I–N refers to the semiconductor structure: P : p-type layer I : intrinsic (undoped) layer N : n-type layer Light → | P | I | N | How it works (core idea) Incoming photons hit the intrinsic layer Each photon generates an electron–hole pair A reverse-bias voltage pulls: electrons → N-side holes → P-side This movement produces a photocurrent proportional to light intensity Key characteristics Low cost Simple circuitry Low noise Low power consumption No internal g...

Intrinsic Carrier Density Explained

Intrinsic Carrier Density Explanation This is a very good conceptual question , and it’s one many students get confused about. Let’s go step by step and keep it physical and practical. ― ― ― ― ― ― ― ― ― ― Why “intrinsic density” means electron–hole pairs 1. What happens inside a pure semiconductor? In a pure (intrinsic) semiconductor like silicon: Each atom shares electrons in covalent bonds At 0 K → all electrons are bound, no free carriers 2. Why do electron–hole pairs form? At room temperature : Atoms vibrate (thermal energy) Some covalent bonds break When a bond breaks: One electron gets enough energy to move to the conduction band It leaves behind an empty state → a hole You cannot get a free electron alone   Every free electron must leave a hole behind That’s why intrinsic density is always pairs , not singl...

Binary Search Tree (BST) vs AVL Tree

Difference Between BST and AVL Tree Element Rotation The key difference between a Binary Search Tree (BST) and an AVL Tree is how they handle balance . ― ― ― ― ― ― ― ― ― ― High-Level Difference BST : Never rotates. The structure depends entirely on insertion order. AVL Tree : Automatically rotates to stay balanced after insertions and deletions. A rotation is a restructuring of nodes that keeps the BST ordering intact while reducing the height of the tree. ― ― ― ― ― ― ― ― ― ― Why Rotations Are Needed Problem in a Normal BST Insert sorted values into a BST: Insert: 10, 20, 30, 40 The BST becomes: 10 \ 20 \ 30 \ 40 This structure behaves like a linked list, causing search, insert, and delete operations to degrade from O(log n) to O(n) . BST response: No correction is made. ― ― ― ...

AVL Trees: Balance Factor and Rotations

1. What the Balance Factor (BF) means For any node in an AVL tree: Balance Factor (BF) = height of left child - height of right child Left-heavy → BF > 0 Right-heavy → BF < 0 Balanced → BF = 0 BF Meaning +1 Left child taller by 1 (ok) 0 Perfectly balanced -1 Right child taller by 1 (ok) +2 Too left-heavy → rotation needed -2 Too right-heavy → rotation needed Balance Factor Table 2. Example Tree 1 (balanced) 10 / \ 5 15 Heights: 5 → 0 (leaf) 15 → 0 (leaf) 10 → max(0,0)+1 = 1 BF: 10 → left 0 - right 0 = 0 (balanced) 5 → leaf → 0 15 → leaf → 0 Tree 2 (+2 → left-heavy, rotation needed) 10 / 5 / 3 Heights: 3 → 0 5 → max(0, -1)+1 = 1 10 → max(1, -1)+1 = 2 BF: 10 → left height 1 - right heigh...

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