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From: "Joel Kolstad" on Mon, Mar 5
2007 9:24 am "OH1GTF" wrote in message One thing I want to add. I have built tayloe detector polyphase network receiver before and I know, that we need I and Q to cancel out the image. But how the heck AM and FM is done? I and Q give you phase information; sqrt(I^2+Q^2) gets you the amplitude of the signal. Now... AM is not phase-modulated, right? So **assuming you can synchronize your carrier to the incoming carrier**, "I" will be the original signal and Q will be zero, so sqrt(I^2+Q^2)=I -- poof, only I needed! If you chose Q, you'd just get zero (ideally) out of the receiver... but since you're presumably in control of the local oscillator, you can just advance or retard it 90 degrees and now Q is in-phase with the signal and I is zero. Hence AM can be made to work with either I or Q... although it's not really recommended, since -- if you have an IQ demodulator anyway -- you can build SSB receivers as well, which is useful. Good post, Joel. Let me emphasize some more simplistic points for other readers: BOTH I (in-phase) and Q (quadrature) carry the SAME amplitude variation as modulation, ergo the AM information can be taken from either one if desired. Selection of sideband for AM uses the phase DIFFERENCE between I and Q that, combined with a wideband audio relative phase- shift network in a linear (algebraic addition/subtraction) mixing circuit (just op-amps), selects the desired AM sideband. The tricky part is that "synchronizing to the incoming carrier" bit: If the receiver and transmitter have the exact same frequency but phase offsets of X degrees, the result is that I receives the original signal mulitplied by cos(X) and Q receives the original signal multiplied by sin(X). (This is just the general case of what I described above where things were 90 degrees out of phase.) Heh, heh, while a concise statement of what it is, the above is going to be a snow job to those not familiar enough with more-advanced math. I know it got me a few decades ago and I just finished explaining that to another last month (off- line with the advantage of some scratch paper to show the relationships). Locking the AM carrier to the local detector sub-circuit oscillator can be done by simply running the whole IF signal into a LIMITER to blot out the sidebands. The resulting limited carrier is then used as a reference to lock the local (detector) oscillator. "Lock" may be simplistic since the old Motorola MC1330 video detector simply limits the carrier internally, uses a single L-C external circuit to keep the internal I and Q references at quadrature, and the two internal "product detectors" output is linearly added internally. Blessedly simple circuit, just one 8-pin DIP and a very ordinary L-C that isn't critical in tuning. I used that in a bank of 8 pulse detectors having carriers up to 62 MHz with no problems (even crammed into a thin space). FM detection by similar, but NOT identical means, to AM. The modulation equations for FM and PM don't allow that similarity since sideband content is not really close to AM. That is done in the more familiar "ratio detector" or "quadrature detector" (sometimes an alternate name) found in consumer electronics SOCs for FM receivers. Try as I might this morning I couldn't put together a text-only simple description of how that critter works. :-( "Synchronous detection" of AM can be done on the same model of the internals of the Motorola MC1330 IC with, perhaps some more finesse applied to the detector's local oscillator to remove some of the noise on low-level input signals; not a terribly-important thing nor precise since the oscillator's lock DC signal can be lowpassed to around a half-second time constant in the loop filter. Notice that phase and amplituide, while connected by phase=arctan(Q/I) and amplitude=sqrt(I^2+Q^2), are two separate, uniquely "identificable" "things" that you can transmit. This is taken advantage of in, e.g., "compatble" AM stereo broadcast standards: In Motorola C-QUAM, for instance, I is set to 1+L+R whereas Q is set to L-R. If you run through the math, the amplitude of this is not 1+L+R, but it is "close enough" if L-R is relatively small, and hence compatibility with traditional (envelope) receivers is maintained, while allowing a synchronous receiver to dig out the full stereo information. C-QUAM follows the FM Stereo system where the demodulated audio is the sum of Left plus Right. One hears (directly) both sources for monophonic audio. The supersonic audio carries Left minus Right audio. Linearly added and subtracted, the Left plus Left and Right plus Right gets the individual "ears" separated. The C-QUAM audio does have a slight stereo distortion on odd selective conditions that favor one sideband over another locally, typically the effect of electric power distribution lines close to the receiver site. Typical on my particular street. :-( 73, |