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A Short History of Radio and Signal Processing in Modern Radios fred harris 29-May 2007 Pulse Train What The Customer Wants What the Customer Will Pay O RE MO RE MO RE MO RE MO RE M MO R E S EV E N LES S MORE MORE MORE M OR E MORE MORE M OR E M OR E M ORE MORE MORE MORE M OR E MORE M O R MORE M OR E E M O MORE MO RE MORE MORE MORE M OR E M OR E M OR E SL E S L SS ESS MORE MORE MORE R E M OR E MORE MORE M OR E M O R E MO RE M OR E MO RE MO RE MO RE M OR E When the Customer wants it. O RE MO RE MO RE MO RE MO RE M MO R E MORE MORE MORE M OR E MORE MORE M OR E M OR E M OR E MORE MORE MORE M OR E MORE M O R MORE M OR E E M O MORE MO RE MORE MORE MORE M OR E M OR E M OR E NE XT WE TO EK MO RRO W TH IS AFT ERN OO N MORE MORE MORE R E M OR E MORE MORE M OR E M O R E MO RE M OR E MO RE MO RE MO RE M OR E The Size Customer Wants. Early Communication at a Distance† (†Communicating Faster Than A Person Can Run) 776 BC 200100 BC 37 AD Homing pigeons used to send message – the winner of the Olympic Games to the Athenians. Relay stations use fire messages to relay messagesstation to station. Heliographs - mirrors send messages to Roman Emperor Tiberius. 1793 AD Claude Chappe invents the first long-distance optical semaphore telegraph line. Very Early Communications at a Distance: Free Space Acoustic and Optical Channels Drums, Whistles, Cannon Fire Claude Chappe 1793 Optical Telegraph Smoke Signals, Beacon Fires Semaphore, Ship Flags, Heliograph, Signal (Aldis) Lamp Signal Fires: Early Warning of Approaching Enemy Carrier Pigeons in WW-1 CDMA-2000, WLAN, CR GSM,CDMA, SDR digital signal processing, DR Shannon, television transistor audio broadcast Marconi's experiments Hertz's experiments Maxwell equations Mrs. Harris’s First Born 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 A Time Line Telecommunications! Applying Maxwell Equations to communication Systems Maxwell's equations (1873) . rot H J D . rot E B div D div B 0 H E D B J magnetic field electric field electric displacement magnetic flux density current density volume charge density James Clerk Maxwell, 1831 – 1879 Milestones in Electromagnetic Communications H.C. Orsted, 1777-1841 “Electrici and Magneticam” 1820 Fraday, 1791-1867, Induction 1831 J.C. Maxwell, 1831-1879, “Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism”, 1873 H.L. Helmholtz, 1821-1894 Predicted E-M Waves Heinrich Hertz, 1857-1894 Radio Propagation 1887 G. Marconi, Radio 1895 Valdemar Poulsen, Continuous Radio Waves 1905 Lee de Forest, Audion 1907 Edward Armstrong, Super-regenerative, Superheterodyne 1917 Frequency Modulation, 1934 Disruptive Technology The electric telegraph arrived in the early 19th century and redefined communications at a distance. It required the confluence of three ingredients: the science of electromagnetism, the ability to generate or store electricity the Industrial Revolution to build the required infrastructure Communication at a Distance with Electricity and Magnetism 1831 Joseph Henry invents the first electric telegraph. 1843 Samuel Morse invents the first long distance electric telegraph line. 1858 Cyrus Field’s Company Lays the Transatlantic Cable. 1876 Alexander Graham Bell patents the electric telephone. Brunel’s Great Eastern 1889 Almon Strowger patents the direct dial telephone automatic telephone exchange. We Need Some Source Coding Here Samuel Thomas von Sömmering’s (1808-10) "Space Multiplexed" Electrochemical Telegraph A B C D 7 8 9 A B C D 36 Lines 7 8 9 Cooke and Wheatstone Telegraph B A B F E 1 D G H I K L M N O P R 2 S V 3 4 8 7 Y 5 9 T W 0 6 2 out of 5 Coding (5*4 = 20 ) The Cooke and Wheatstone first commercial electrical telegraph entered use on the Great Western Railway on April 9, 1839. It ran for 13 miles from Paddington Station to West Drayton On January 1, 1845 John Tawell was apprehended following the use of a needle telegraph message from Slough to Paddington. This is thought to be the first use of the telegraph to apprehend a murderer. The message was: A murder has just been committed at Salt Hill and the suspected Murderer was seen to take a first class ticket to London by the train that left Slough at 7:42 pm. He is in the garb of a Kwaker with a brown great coat on which reaches his feet. He is in the last compartment of the second first-class carriage Single Needle and Variable Length Code Cooke-Wheatstone Single Needle Telegraph (c 1850) THE TELEPHONE 1876 - Alexander Graham Bell invents the Telephone. He offers the patent to Western Union for $100,000. The President of the Telegraph Company, appointed a committee to investigate the offer. The often quoted report reads in part: The Telephone purports to transmit the speaking voice over telegraph wires. We found that the voice is very weak and indistinct, and grows even weaker when long wires are used between the transmitter and receiver. Technically, we do not see that this device will be ever capable of sending recognizable speech over a distance of several miles. Bell wants to install a “telephone device" in every city. The idea is idiotic on the face of it. “We do not recommend its purchase." Early Telephone Instruments Ericsson "Eiffel Tower" Telephone, 1885 11 digit Potbelly Dial Candlestick Strowger 1905 Dial Candlestick Automatic Electric 1921 Footnote: Western Electric 1877, 5 Phones Engineers were 1894, 250,000 Phones wrong! Very Wrong! 1906, 7,500,000 Phones Communication at a Distance by Electromagnetic Radiation (Radio or Wireless) 1894 Guglielmo Marconi improves wireless telegraphy. 1902 Guglielmo Marconi transmits radio signals across the Atlantic Ocean. 1914 First cross continental telephone call made. 1916 First radios with tuners different stations. 1930 First television broadcasts in the United States. The Players • • • • • • • Wireless Radio Analog Radio Digital Radio DSP Radio Software Defined Radio Cognitive Radio It all Started with….. Heinrich Rudolph Hertz,1847-1894 Shocking! 3. Electromagnetic 2. Spark Produces Electromagnetic Waves waves induce voltage in resonator, producing small spark in spark gap. 1. Induction Coil Produces High Voltage Guglielmo Marconi, 1874-1937 December 12 1901 Spark Gap Transmitter Early Radios Were Mechanical (Many Moving Parts) SPARK TRANSMITTERS Spark Gap Wireless Transmitter (Damped Oscillations) Sparks came in all sizes Marine Spark Transmitter Radio Operators aboard Ship Were Called Sparky Because they Operated the Spark Transmitter Marconi Tower Radio Mobile Communications: Communicate to a moving Train 150 ft Antenna stretched across 3-railway cars (187.4 kilocycles, 1600 Meters) 2 KW 500 cycle quenching transmitter The Eiffel Tower The Eiffel Tower was built for an industrial exposition (1889) and the centenary of the French Revolution. It created amazement and outrage. The previous world champion, America's Washington Monument was half the tower's height. The tower held the world’s title for the world’s tallest structure till 1930, when it was surpassed by the Chrysler Building. Eiffel tried to find practical applications for his tower. He wanted the tower to work, to pay its way. He could find no practical application for the tower! Parisians spoke seriously of tearing the tower down. Then Eiffel discovered the 20th century's killer app for towers, Marconi's radio! The tower started broadcasting signals in 1904 and by 1908, the French military had installed a radio espionage nest, where they could eavesdrop on German and Austro-Hungarian stations. Due to Marconi’s invention, the tower's future was secure. Valdemar Poulsen, 1869-1942 Continuous (Undamped) Carrier Arc Generator Poulsen Arc Transmitter Lee De Forest, 1877-1961 Put those sparks to rest! Patent No. 879532 The path to the Triode Thermonic Valve, Thomas Edison, John Fleming, Lee de Forest Edwin Armstrong, 1890-1954 1912 regenerative receiver Regenerative Receiver A little Feedback Goes a Long Way Tuned RF Radio Early Mobile Communications It may not be safe to drive while using your mobile phone! Edwin Armstrong’s Super Heterodyne Receiver ANT RF AMP IF AMP IF AMP DET AMP From Disclosure: June 3, 1918 Replacing the Vacuum Tube 1947 Solid State Amplifier Shockley, Brattain and Bardeen Integrated Circuits 1958 Jack Kilby, TI Kilby Awarded Nobel Prize in 2000 Robert Noyce, Intel Noyce Founded Intel Ted Hoff worked for Noyce s or ist ip s n h Tra r c pe More, More, Moore Critic s have predicted the imm inent 10,000,000,000 demise of Moore’s law ever since Gordon Moore stated it in 1965. s 1,000,000,000 th Electric al Engineers continue to on m 4 defy physical c hallenges, 2 Ita nium2 y er 592 Million v squeezing ever more 100,000,000 se Ita nium 2 le b 220 Million u circuitry into less spac e d o Pentium 4 p i 42 Million Xeon 42 Million and making inform ation ch a 10,000,000 Ita nium 25 Million n Pentium II fly ever more so r 7.5 Million Celeron 7.5 Million o ist swiftly. Pentium Pro 5.5 Millio n ns 1,000,000 100,000 1958 Jac k Kilby (TI) & Robert Noyc e (intel) Invent Integrated Circuit 1965 Gordon Moore States his fam ous axiom , later c alled Moore’s law 1,000 o M 8080 4,500 8008 3,500 4004 First proc essor 2,000 1960 de n tra Pentium 3.1 Million 486 1.2 Million 386 275,000 286 134,000 8088 29,000 10,000 1947 Transistor Invented 1947 1950 e Th : aw sL ’ e or sit f yo 1970 1977 Apple II 1980 1999 1996 Blac kberry DVD Players 1991 Kodak First Digital Cam era 1983 Motorola First Mobile Phone 1990 2000 2010 We all own a Billion Transistors NEXT-GENERATION VIRTEX FAMILY FROM XILINX TO TOP ONE BILLION TRANSISTOR MARK The 1 billion transistor processor: who will be first? Semiconductor International, March 2003 Future Microprocessors - How to use a Billion Transistors September 1997 issue of IEEE Computer Eiffel Tower Contains 18,084 Parts It is Fastened together by 2.5 Million Rivets The World grows more transistors than it grows grains of rice! Harry Nyquist,(1889-1960) The Sampling Theorem fS>BW Analog-to-Digital Converter Digital-to-Analog Converter Start of the Modern era ADC and DSP Insertion Sample The Intermediate Frequency Stage Perform Timing and Carrier Synchronization in DSP Land The Modern Era Digital Radio (DR): The baseband signal processing is invariably implemented on a DSP. radio analog-to-digital baseband data frequency conversion processing processing A/D RF c o n t r o l ( p a r a m e t r i z a t i o n ) to user radio frontend from user transmit receive Software Radio (SR): An ideal SR directly samples the antenna output. Software Defined Radio (SDR): An SDR is a realizable version of an SR: Signals are sampled after a suitable band selection filter. Joe Mitola, 2000 Everything is in Place A Simple Communication System INFORMATION SOURCE MODULATOR CHANNEL DEMODULATOR BANDLIMITED AWGN Spec tral Distribution Amplitude Distribution x f INFORMATION DESTINATION All Channels are Waveform Channels Repeaters are not! N1(t) AMP ATTN s(t) NK(t) N2(t) ATTN AMP ATTN s(t)+ N1 AMP s(t)+ N1+ N2 s(t)+ N1+ N2+ ...+ NK ANALOG REPEATER CHANNEL N1(t) ATTN s(t) NK(t) N2(t) ATTN ATTN ^s1(t) ^s2(t) DIGITAL REPEATER CHANNEL ^sK(t) Why Digital Communications? But Let Your Communications Be Yea, Yea: Nay, Nay: For What So Ever is More Than These Cometh of Evil. Sermon on the Mount, Matthew, Ch. 5, verse. 37 Probability of Error Conditional Density Functions d Probability of Error, AWGN 10 -1 10 P(e) -2 10 -3 10 -5 Slope at 10 1 Dec ade/dB 1 ERFC( Eb ) 2 N0 -4 10 10 -0 SNR= 9.6 dB -5 10 10 -5 P(e)= 10 -6 9.6 -7 SNR(dB) -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 10 log10( 0.8 1.0 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Eb 2 )= 10 log 10( 1 [ d/2 ] ) N0 2 1.5 2.0 d/2 = 3 .0 Eb N0 /2 4.0 4.27 5.0 d/2 6.0 Bottom Line 100 Repeaters, P100 ( ) 10 Given : P100 ( ) 10 5 : 5 Analog SNR Then : 10Log10 ( ) 10dB 100 10Log10 (SNR ) 10dB 10Log10 (100) 30dB Given : P100 ( ) 105 : Digital Then : 100P1 ( ) 105 P1 ( ) 107 SNR 12dB Modulator and Demodulator MODULATOR BASEBAND WAVEFORM M-ARY ALPHABET BITS DATA TRANSFORMS DIGITAL BITS MODULATOR RF ANALOG SPECTRAL TRANSFORMS RF CHANNEL ANALOG RADIO FREQUENCY WAVEFORM SPECTRAL TRANSFORMS WAVEFORM TRANSFORMS RADIO FREQUENCY WAVEFORM DIGITAL WAVEFORM TRANSFORMS BASEBAND WAVEFORM DEMODULATOR DATA TRANSFORMS M-ARY ALPHABET DEMODULATOR BITS BITS Claude Shannon Information is measurable. Distortion is Controllable. Noise Does not Limit Fidelity. 'The world has only 10 kinds of people. Those who get binary, and those who don't.' Shannon’s Digital Model DIGITAL MODULATOR BITS DATA TRANSFORMS M-ARY ALPHABET DISCRETE CHANNEL WAVEFORM TRANSFORMS SPECTRAL TRANSFORMS BASEBAND WAVEFORM RF CHANNEL M-ARY ALPHABET BITS DATA TRANSFORMS DIGITAL DEMODULATOR BASEBAND WAVEFORM WAVEFORM TRANSFORMS SPECTRAL TRANSFORMS RF Shannon’s Model BITS BANDWIDTH REDUCING BANDWIDTH PRESERVING BANDWIDTH EXPANDING SOURCE ENCODING ENCRYPTION CHANNEL ENCODING BITS SOURCE DECODING DECRYPTION CHANNEL DECODING CHANNEL It’s all Bits! Bits in, Bits out! Shannon’s Legacy • Communication System Resources Bandwidth Signal to Noise Ratio Computational Complexity • A Communication System needs a Computer in Modulator and Demodulator! • We have a Computer on Board! • We can use it to do some Heavy Lifting The Four Pillars of Modern Communications SIGNAL to NOISE SIGNAL TRANSFORMS DATA TRANSFORMS BANDWIDTH MODERN COMMUNICATIONS The Modulator Digital to Analog Interface Moves Towards the RF BASEBAND M-ARY SIGNAL CONDITIONER DIGITAL RF TUNER ANALOG BASEBAND M-ARY SIGNAL CONDITIONER DIGITAL TUNER RF ANALOG BASEBAND M-ARY SIGNAL CONDITIONER TUNER DIGITAL ANALOG RF The Demodulator Analog to Digital Interface Moves Towards the RF BASEBAND RF M-ARY SIGNAL CONDITIONER TUNER ANALOG DIGITAL BASEBAND RF M-ARY SIGNAL CONDITIONER TUNER ANALOG DIGITAL BASEBAND RF M-ARY SIGNAL CONDITIONER TUNER ANALOG DIGITAL First Generation DSP Receiver IMAGE REJECT FILTER SAMPLER I-F FILTER LNA GAIN LOW-PASS FILTER FIRST LO CARRIER VCO TUNING LOOP FILTER DATA DETECTOR MATCHED FILTER TIMING VCO LOOP FILTER PHASE DETECTOR Second Generation DSP Receiver IMAGE REJECT FILTER SAMPLER I-F FILTER LNA GAIN LOW-PASS FILTER FIRST LO CARRIER VCO TUNING LOOP FILTER DATA DETECTOR MATCHED FILTER TIMING VCO PHASE DETECTOR LOOP FILTER SAMPLER IMAGE REJECT FILTER I-F FILTER LNA GAIN MATCHED FILTER LOW-PASS FILTER FIRST LO CARRIER VCO TIMING VCO TUNING LOOP FILTER LOOP FILTER DATA DETECTOR PHASE DETECTOR Third Generation DSP Receiver SAMPLER IMAGE REJECT FILTER I-F FILTER LNA GAIN MATCHED FILTER LOW-PASS FILTER FIRST LO CARRIER VCO TIMING VCO TUNING LOOP FILTER LOOP FILTER I-F FILTER LNA GAIN FIRST LO TUNING MATCHED FILTER DATA DETECTOR CARRIER DDS TIMING DDS PHASE DETECTOR LOOP FILTER LOOP FILTER LOW-PASS FILTER SECOND LO SAMPLING CLOCK PHASE DETECTOR INTERPOLATOR SAMPLER IMAGE REJECT FILTER DATA DETECTOR SECOND GENERATION DSP CENTRIC MODEL DIGITAL MODULATOR BITS DATA TRANSFORMS SAMPLED DATA CHANNEL DSP MODULATOR WAVEFORM TRANSFORMS M-ARY ALPHABET M-ARY ALPHABET BITS DATA TRANSFORMS BASEBAND WAVEFORM DIGITAL SIGNALS RF CHANNEL DATA SIGNALS SPECTRAL TRANSFORMS ANALOG SIGNALS BASEBAND WAVEFORM WAVEFORM TRANSFORMS DIGITAL DSP DEMODULATOR DEMODULATOR SPECTRAL TRANSFORMS RF THIRD GENERATION DSP CENTRIC MODEL DIGITAL MODULATOR BITS DATA TRANSFORMS M-ARY ALPHABET M-ARY ALPHABET BITS DATA TRANSFORMS DIGITAL DEMODULATOR WAVEFORM TRANSFORMS ANALOG CHANNEL SPECTRAL TRANSFORMS RF BASEBAND WAVEFORM ANALOG SIGNALS DIGITAL SIGNALS BASEBAND WAVEFORM WAVEFORM TRANSFORMS CHANNEL DATA SIGNALS DSP MODULATOR SPECTRAL TRANSFORMS DSP DEMODULATOR RF Mapping an Analog prototype to its Digital Counterpart PROTOTYPE ANALOG PROCESS ANALOG SIGNAL PROCESSING x(t) y(t) EQUIVALENT DIGITAL PROCESS x(t) x(t) ANALOG x(n) TO DIGITAL CONVERTER ANALOG BLOCKS y(t) DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSING y(n) x(n) DIGITAL TO ANALOG CONVERTER DIGITAL BLOCKS y(t) y(n) Good Advice! • Don’t Copy Analog Legacy Prototype to DSP Domain. • Legacy Designs include Compromises Appropriate for their Time. • Return to First Principles! • Start with a fresh slate using current resources and perspectives. Signal Processing in Transmitter-I Base Band Sigma-Delta ADC VCELPC Speech Source Coding Spectral Shaping Fixed Interpolation Arbitrary Interpolation I-Q Balance DC Canceling Digital Up-Conversion Sin(x)/(x) Predistortion IF Sigma-Delta DAC Direct Sequence Spreading Automatic Gain Control