Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks: Sideband AM

Vestigial Sideband AM

The scheme most often used for AM data transmission is vestigial sideband amplitude modulation
(VSBAM). This form is used because the bandwidth it requires is a little more than
one half that required for a DSBAM signal. This is the reason why VSBAM is used in commercial
broadcast television. The upper sideband is selected for television; however, either
sideband could be used. In VSBAM the carrier is not fully suppressed, and a portion (a
"vestige") of the upper sideband (for data transmission) is transmitted. It is important that
some carrier frequency be received at detection so the signal will be demodulated correctly
and in phase. (This is necessary because of filter characteristics; filters do not abruptly cut
off at a certain frequency but have certain "roll-off" characteristics.)

Phase is not terribly important to analog voice users. However, for digital signals it is very
important. Phase distortion is caused by the reactive components of the media and gives
different parts of the signal different delays. Parts of the signal are not supposed to arrive
later than other parts, even when all parts started at the same time. This distortion makes
detection very difficult.

Single Sideband AM

Many people are familiar with single sideband AM (SSBAM) from its use in amateur and
Citizens Band radios. A similar use in telecommunications is the independent sideband AM
(ISBAM) signal system. The sidebands of a DSBAM signal are redundant (contain the same
information). Therefore, if the carrier signal is totally removed (the intelligence is in the sidebands)
and one sideband is eliminated along with the carrier, then all the transmit power
can be employed in only one sideband. This process is known as "single sideband transmission."
It does conserve bandwidth, but the receiver must be more complex. For
demodulation to take place, the receiver must generate a signal of the same frequency as
the carrier, which is used to demodulate the sideband. Though this modulation is quite
readily done today, the phase of the receiver-generated carrier is not always the same as the
carrier that performed the modulation. This is what gives SSBAM that peculiar voice quality:
the difficulty in correctly reproducing the carrier in the correct phase at the receiver. SSBAM
is seldom used as the sole modulation method for digital signals. It is used in analog multiplexing
schemes and in the radio transmission of data after the data has been converted
from its "baseband" frequency by some other modulation method.

Independent Sideband AM

Independent sideband AM is a single sideband type of signal except that both the upper
and lower sidebands are transmitted with the carrier suppressed. Each sideband carries
independent (from the other sideband) information. In fact, the standard analog ISBAM
transmission has four 3 KHz channels. This multi-channel scheme is not directly used in data
transmission. An important characteristic of ISBAM is that when the upper sideband is used
for one information channel and a lower sideband for another, they cannot demodulate
each other. If they could it would result in distortion. You will see this technique used in
Carrierless Amplitude and Phase modulation (CAP), which is used in digital subscriber line
transport (DSL).

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