View Single Post
  #3   Report Post  
Old June 6th 05, 01:53 PM
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Greetings all,

I'm new to the group and find many of the various threads fascinating.
I'm currently building a homebrew HF rig.

I think undersampling has probably been around nearly as long as
sampling itself. This is because samplers are a subset of (RF) mixers,
and early engineers fluent in RF mixer skills would have had
undersampling in their toolboxes already.

As mixers, samplers are modelled as a multipliers with the sampler
clock serving as the local oscillator. What makes samplers a subset of
mixers are the constraints placed on the LO--in the ideal sampler a
Dirac delta function is used. This waveform has the property that all
harmonics (including the zeroth or DC and even harmonics) have the same
amplitude. Our doubly-balanced RF mixers typically respond to only odd
harmonics. Real-World samplers approximate the ideal sampler fairly
well over a wide frequency range.

Because samplers have a DC response, the baseband signal Fin is passed
by the sampler, something RF mixers don't normally do (but can be made
to do simply by putting a DC component on the local oscillator). When
viewing a sampler as a mixer, aliasing is nothing more or less than the
mixing product (LO-Fin) overlapping the baseband signal Fin.
Undersampling is nothing more or less than prefiltering the desired
band of frequencies and mixing them to baseband with the appropriate
harmonic of the local oscillator.

I've not found the notion of samplers as mixers in the literature, but
probably could if I looked hard enough. Perhaps authors consider the
notion either obvious or not useful, but to this old ham viewing
samplers as mixers is useful.

Bonnie's article contains a fun blunder. She states Nyquist and
Shannon developed sampling theory in the 1920's, which would have put
Shannon in his teens. Shannon's seminal paper on communication theory
was actually published in 1948. I've read that the 'Nyquist rate'
should really be called the 'Shannon rate' as he was the first to
develop it. Anyone know more?

Regards,
Glenn Dixon, AC7ZN