A simple technique for calculating the error probability performance and associated noisy reference loss of practical unbalanced QPSK receivers is presented. The approach is based on expanding the error probability conditioned on the loop phase error φ in a power series in φ and then, keeping only the first few terms of this series, averaging this conditional error probability over the probability density function of φ. Doing so results in an expression for the average error probability which is in the form of a leading term representing the ideal (perfect synchronization references) performance plus a term proportional to the mean-squared crosstalk. Thus, the additional error probability due to noisy synchronization references occurs as an additive term proportional to the mean-squared phase jitter

directly associated with the receiver\´s tracking loop. Similar arguments are advanced to give closed-form results for the noisy reference loss itself.