<span>This book develops the concepts for the transmission of digital information sequences through analog, band limited channels, including the topics of pulse shaping, channels with amplitude and delay distortion, eye patterns, zero forcing and mean squared error equalization, and data scrambling.
Digital Communications: Introduction to Communication Systems (Synthesis Lectures on Communications)
โ Scribed by Jerry D. Gibson
- Publisher
- Springer
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 168
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This book develops the concepts for the transmission of digital information sequences through analog, band limited channels, including the topics of pulse shaping, channels with amplitude and delay distortion, eye patterns, zero forcing and mean squared error equalization, and data scrambling.ย ย
The text considers the effects of noise in digital communications, developing the fundamental ideas of signal space, optimum symbol-by-symbol detection, and modulation system design, with particular emphasis on maximum likelihood and maximum a posteriori detection and system performance comparisons based on energy per bit to noise ratio and average error probability.ย The key technique of maximum likelihood sequence estimation is also developed.ย ย
Tutorial coverage provides an introduction to block and convolutional codes for error control coding, including coding and decoding methods for error detection and correction, tree and trellis representations, and Viterbi decoding.ย Some performance comparisons for selected codes in terms of energy per bit to noise ratio versus bit error probability are presented.ย ย
This book examines joint coding and modulation methods such as constant envelope modulation and trellis coded modulation, including examples such as minimum shift keying and offset quadrature phase shift keying.
โฆ Table of Contents
Contents
About theย Author
1 Data Transmission
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Baseband Pulse Shaping
1.3 Partial Response Signaling
1.4 Deterministic Distortion
1.5 Eye Patterns
1.6 Equalization
1.7 Data Scramblers
1.8 Carrier Acquisition andย Symbol Synchronization
1.9 Problems
2 Noise inย Digital Communications
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Signal Space andย theย GramโSchmidt Procedure
2.3 The Additive White Gaussian Noise Channel
2.4 Optimum Receivers
2.5 Error Probability andย Signal Design
2.6 System Performance Comparisons
2.7 Maximum Likelihood Sequence Estimation
2.8 Summary
3 Channel Coding
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Block Codes
3.3 Cyclic Codes
3.4 Convolutional Codes
3.5 Automatic Repeat-Request Systems
3.6 Code Comparisons
3.7 Summary
4 Coded Modulation
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Coherent Binary FSK
4.3 Constant Envelope Modulation
4.4 Trellis-Coded Modulation
4.5 Summary
4.6 Problems
References
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><span>This book develops the basic concepts in understanding Analog Communications.ย Beginning with coverage of amplitude modulation, including the time and frequency domain representations of double sideband, single sideband, and vestigial sideband modulation, and introduces the student to the f
<p><span>This book develops the basic concepts in understanding Analog Communications.ย Beginning with coverage of amplitude modulation, including the time and frequency domain representations of double sideband, single sideband, and vestigial sideband modulation, and introduces the student to the f
This book develops the basic concepts in understanding Analog Communications. Beginning with coverage of amplitude modulation, including the time and frequency domain representations of double sideband, single sideband, and vestigial sideband modulation, and introduces the student to the fundamental
Preface. About the Author. 1 Elements of Information Theory. 1.1 Introduction. 1.2 Basic Concepts. 1.3 Communication System Model. 1.4 Concept of Information and Measure of Amount of Information. 1.5 Message Sources and Source Coding. 1.6 Discrete Source Coding. 1.7 Channel Models from the Inf