(rev. 01/13/2010) 
 
Notes On Chapter Ten
-- Modulation and Modems
-  10.1 Introduction  
    
    -  How information is used to change a high-frequency
         electromagnetic wave, and
    
 -  Why that is important
    
 
 -  10.2 Carriers, Frequency and Propagation  
    
    -  Depending on the medium there will be certain frequencies that
         propagate better than others.
    
 -  A common way of getting good performance is to place a continuously
         oscillating "carrier" electromagnetic wave on a medium - one that
	 propagates well - and to transmit information by making small
	changes to the carrier.
    
 
 -  10.3 Analog Modulation Schemes  
    
    -  The small changes made to the carrier are called "modulation"
    
 -  Basically there are only three changes one can make to a wave:
         
	 -  Amplitude modulation (AM)
	 
 -  Frequency Modulation (FM)
	 
 -  Phase Shift Modulation
	 
 
     
 -  10.4 Amplitude Modulation  
    
    -  The amplitude of the carrier is varied in proportion to the signal
         being sent.
    
 -  When AM is used to carry an analog signal, the "envelope" of the
	 modulated wave has the shape of the signal.   
    
 
 -  10.5 Frequency Modulation  
    
    -  FM slightly increases the frequency of the carrier corresponding to
	 where the signal is strong, and decreases it slightly corresponding
	 to where the signal is weak.
    
 
 -  10.6 Phase Shift Modulation  
    
    -  Phase shift modulation changes "the offset from a reference time at
         which the sine wave begins" i.e. it "slides" the waveform forward or
         backward slightly.
    
 -  It is difficult to distinguish from FM in the case of an analog
         signal, so phase shift modulation is used on digital signals.
    
 
 -  10.7 Amplitude Modulation and Shannon's Theorem  
    
    -  AM varies the amplitude only slightly.
    
 -  Lowering the amplitude too much would also significantly lower the
         signal to noise ratio, which in turn could lead to lower effective
	 bandwidth.
    
 -  One might visualize the signal getting "lost in the noise."
    
 
 -  10.8 Modulation,Digital Input and Shift Keying  
    
    -  When digital data is used to modulate a carrier, it is often called
	 shift keying, instead of modulation.
    
 -  There is a small fixed set of possible modulated values.
    
 -  For example, with AM, there might be only the possible of running the
	 carrier at full amplitude to represent a 1-bit, and at some
	 significantly smaller amplitude to represent a 0-bit.
    
 
 -  10.9 Phase Shift Keying  
    
    -  phase shift keying provides a convenient way to allow more than one
         bit to be sent during each period of the carrier.
    
 -  For example, the four phase angles of -90, 0, 90 and 180 provide a
         two-bit code.
    
 
 -  10.10 Phase Shift and a Constellation Diagram  
    
    -  Noise and distortion limit the ability of hardware to distinguish
         among minor differences in phase shifts.
    
 -  Therefore it is not practical to use very many different phase shift
         keys.
    
 
 -  10.11 Quadrature Amplitude Modulation  
    
    -  QAM schemes combines amplitude modulation and phase shift keying to
	 achieve, for example the sending of a 4-bit codeword in each period
	 of the carrier signal.
    
 
 -  10.12 Modern Hardware for Modulation and Demodulation  
    
    -  A modulator is a device that accepts a stream of data bits and
         applies the corresponding modulation to a carrier wave (which causes
         the data to be transmitted on the carrier).
    
 -  A demodulator is a device that inputs a modulated carrier
	 signal and extracts from it the stream of data bits that was used to
	 modulate the carrier.  The demodulator outputs the data stream,
	 so it can be used as input to another device.
    
 -  Over a full-duplex communication channel using modulation and
         demodulation of a carrier, a modulator and demodulator are needed on
	 both ends of the channel.  Typically the two devices are combined
	 into one unit - called a modem.
    
 
 -  10.13 Optical and Radio Frequency Modems  
    
    -  There are RF modems to use with RF, and
    
 -  Optical modems to use with optical fiber
    
 -  The technology varies with the media, but the principle is the same.
    
 
 -  10.14 Dialup Modems  
    
    -  A dialup modem modulates a (relatively low-frequency) analog audio
         carrier according to digital input it receives from, say, a computer.
    
 -  Dialup modems can dial telephone numbers and answer incoming
	 telephone calls.  In other words they combine the functionality of a
	 modem and a telephone.
    
 -  When dialup modems were first designed, every stage of transmission
	 of a telephone call was implemented utilizing modulated analog audio
	 carrier technology.
    
 -  Nowadays telephone companies use digital technology internally.
    
 -  Calls that travel a long distance are digitized by telephone company
	 equipment at a local telephone 'station' and transmitted to another
	 station near the other party's telephone.  That station translates
	 the digital signal back into audio before relaying it to the other
	 party.
    
 -  So ironically, the digital info from a computer is translated by a
	 modem into analog, and back into digital by the telephone company
	 equipment.  (Of course, the digital formats used by the computer and
	 the telephone company are not compatible, so some kind of
	 translation would be needed in any case.)
    
 -  When a modem is part of the circuitry inside a computer it is called
	 an internal modem.  If it plugs in to the outside of a
	 computer, it's an external modem
    
 
 -  10.15 QAM Applied to Dialup  
    
    -  QAM is used with modern dialup modems to achieve higher bit rates.
    
 
 -  10.16 V.32 and V.32bis Dialup Modems  
    
    -  The V.32 dialup modem standard uses 32 combinations of amplitude
	 shift and phase shift to achieve a full-duplex data rate of 9600 bps.
    
 -  The V.32bis standard employs 128 combinations of phase shift and
         amplitude shift, and achieves a data rate of 14,400 bps (also
	 full-duplex).