12.4 Application to Digital Communications 731
FIGURE 12.9
PCM system: transmitter, channel,
and receiver.
LPF and holdSample and coder Quantizer
Repeater
Decoder LPF
PCM transmitter
Repeater Repeater
PCM receiver
Channel
m(t) ···1011100···
···1011100··· ···1011100···
···1011100··· m^(t)
its analysis is complicated. Figure 12.9 shows a transmitter, a channel, and a receiver of a PCM
system.
The main disadvantage of PCM is that its bandwidth is wider than that of the analog message
it represents. This is due to the rectangular pulses in the signal. If we represent the PCM signal
s(t)as
s(t)=
N∑− 1
n= 0
anφ(t−nτs)
whereφ(t)is a function andτsis the duration of a symbol, the spectrum ofs(t)will be
S()=
∑N
n= 0
anF[φ(t−nτs)]
=
∑N
n= 0
anφ()e−jnτs
Suppose that the function is a sinc function having an infinite time support so thats(t)also has an
infinite time support. If
φ(t)=
sin(πt/τs)
πt
it has a band-limited spectrum,
φ()=u(+π/τs)−u(−π/τs)
so that the spectrum of the signal is also band limited. On the other hand, by duality if we use
a rectangular pulse as the functionφ(t), its spectrum will spread over all frequencies, making the
spectrum of the signal of very large bandwidth.