Constellation diagram

Constellation diagram

A constellation diagram is a representation of a signal modulated by a digital modulation scheme such as quadrature amplitude modulation or phase-shift keying. It displays the signal as a two-dimensional scatter diagram in the complex plane at symbol sampling instants. In a more abstract sense, it represents the possible symbols that may be selected by a given modulation scheme as points in the complex plane. Measured constellation diagrams can be used to recognize the type of interference and distortion in a signal.

A constellation diagram for 8-PSK.

By representing a transmitted symbol as a complex number and modulating a cosine and sine carrier signal with the real and imaginary parts (respectively), the symbol can be sent with two carriers on the same frequency. They are often referred to as quadrature carriers. A coherent detector is able to independently demodulate these carriers. This principle of using two independently modulated carriers is the foundation of quadrature modulation. In pure phase modulation, the phase of the modulating symbol is the phase of the carrier itself.

As the symbols are represented as complex numbers, they can be visualized as points on the complex plane. The real and imaginary axes are often called the in phase, or I-axis and the quadrature, or Q-axis. Plotting several symbols in a scatter diagram produces the constellation diagram. The points on a constellation diagram are called constellation points. They are a set of modulation symbols which comprise the modulation alphabet.

Also a diagram of the ideal positions, signal space diagram, in a modulation scheme can be called a constellation diagram. In this sense the constellation is not a scatter diagram but a representation of the scheme itself. The example shown here is for 8-PSK, which has also been given a Gray coded bit assignment.

Interpretation

A constellation diagram for rectangular 16-QAM.

Upon reception of the signal, the demodulator examines the received symbol, which may have been corrupted by the channel or the receiver (e.g. additive white Gaussian noise, distortion, phase noise or interference). It selects, as its estimate of what was actually transmitted, that point on the constellation diagram which is closest (in a Euclidean distance sense) to that of the received symbol. Thus it will demodulate incorrectly if the corruption has caused the received symbol to move closer to another constellation point than the one transmitted.

This is maximum likelihood detection. The constellation diagram allows a straightforward visualization of this process — imagine the received symbol as an arbitrary point in the I-Q plane and then decide that the transmitted symbol is whichever constellation point is closest to it.

For the purpose of analyzing received signal quality, some types of corruption are very evident in the constellation diagram. For example:

  • Gaussian noise shows as fuzzy constellation points
  • Non-coherent single frequency interference shows as circular constellation points
  • Phase noise shows as rotationally spreading constellation points
  • Attenuation causes the corner points to move towards the center

A constellation diagram visualises so similar phenomena as an eye pattern does for one-dimensional signals. The eye pattern can be used to see timing jitter in one dimension of modulation.

See also


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Diagram — Further information: Chart Sample flowchart representing the decision process to add a new article to Wikipedia. A diagram is a two dimensional geometric symbolic representation of information according to some visualization technique. Sometimes …   Wikipedia

  • Constellation (disambiguation) — A constellation is a certain area of the celestial sphere. Constellation may also refer to: General Constellations (journal), a peer reviewed sociology journal Systemic Constellations or Family Constellations, a kind of therapeutic method… …   Wikipedia

  • Hertzsprung–Russell diagram — Hertzsprung–Russell diagram[1] with 22,000 stars plotted from the Hipparcos catalog and 1,000 from the Gliese catalog of nearby stars. Stars tend to fall only into certain regions of the diagram. The most predominant is the diagonal, going from… …   Wikipedia

  • Color–color diagram — In astronomy, color–color diagrams are a means of comparing the apparent magnitudes of stars at different wavelengths. Astronomers typically observe at narrow bands around certain wavelengths, and objects observed will have different brightnesses …   Wikipedia

  • Cygnus (constellation) — Cygnus Constellation List of stars in Cygnus Abbreviation Cyg Genitive Cygni Pronunciation …   Wikipedia

  • Phase-shift keying — Passband modulation v · d · e Analog modulation AM · …   Wikipedia

  • Quadrature amplitude modulation — (QAM) (Pronounced IPA|kwa:m) is a modulation scheme which conveys data by changing ( modulating ) the amplitude of two carrier waves. These two waves, usually sinusoids, are out of phase with each other by 90° and are thus called quadrature… …   Wikipedia

  • Flag of Brazil — Use National flag and ensign …   Wikipedia

  • Symbol rate — In digital communications, symbol rate (also known as baud or modulation rate) is the number of symbol changes (waveform changes or signalling events) made to the transmission medium per second using a digitally modulated signal or a line code.… …   Wikipedia

  • Eye pattern — Graphical eye pattern showing an example of two power levels in an OOK modulation scheme. Constant binary 1 and 0 levels are shown, as well as transitions from 0 to 1, 1 to 0, 0 to 1 to 0, and 1 to 0 to 1. In telecommunication, an eye pattern,… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”