Title :
A five-sample digital FM-demodulator with application to multichannel TV sound
Author :
Gibson, James J. ; McClary, Dennis R.
Author_Institution :
David Sarnoff Res. Center, Princeton, NJ, USA
Abstract :
In the FM receiver we shall sample the input signal at a rate F = 4f/(2N+1) = sample rate, where f is close to the carrier frequency. Five successive samples a,b,c,d,e are delivered to an arithmetic unit executing a particular algorithm that the authors define. The parameter D in the algorithm is a very good approximation of the frequency deviation d. In fact, if the input signal is a sinewave with a frequency f+d, then D is strictly a function of d. A carrier FM-modulated by a low frequency sinewave with d < F/20, has harmonic distortion < 0.5%. Thus the algorithm interprets the five samples as if they were samples of a sinewave. An analysis predicts that the behavior of the demodulator is in all respects very similar to analog demodulators with limiters, e.g. quadrature detectors. Random and quantization nOise in the input yield a "triangular" output noise spectrum. Together with oversampling, this effect allows for rough quantization of the input. A practical problem with this demodulator is that a nonlinear a/d converter may cause beats. The main problem, however, is arithmetic: the need for a division with the square of the carrier envelope puts a round-off error limit to the dynamic range. However, this is of no concern if the carrier has a fairly constant amplitude, such as the SAP subcarrier in the composite BTSC signal.
Keywords :
demodulators; frequency modulation; television equipment; five-sample digital FM-demodulator; multichannel TV sound; Acoustic noise; Arithmetic; Demodulation; Finite impulse response filter; Frequency; Harmonic distortion; Noise figure; Quantization; Roundoff errors; TV;
Conference_Titel :
Consumer Electronics, 1988. Digest of Technical Papers. ICCE., IEEE 1988 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Rosemount, IL, USA
DOI :
10.1109/ICCE.1988.10749