Chapter 5

Strictly Bandlimited Modulations with Large Envelope Fluctuation (Nyquist Signaling)

Nyquist signaling schemes, which by the very nature of their construction are strictly bandlimited, clearly result in the most bandwidth-efficient modulations of all the ones considered previously in this monograph; however, they also result in modulations with the largest envelope fluctuation. Since the theory of Nyquist signaling is well documented in many textbooks on digital communications, e.g., [13], we shall present here only a brief summary of the basic principles simply as a matter of completeness. Although most of the discussion will be focussed on single-channel binary signaling, the extension to multilevel and quadrature signaling schemes such as QAM will be immediately obvious and will receive a brief treatment.

5.1 Binary Nyquist Signaling

The Nyquist criterion is a condition imposed on a waveform that results in zero ISI when a sequence of such waveforms amplitude-modulated by the data is sequentially transmitted at a fixed data rate. Specifically, a binary Nyquist signal is one whose underlying pulse shape, p(t), has uniform samples taken at the bit rate, 1/Tb (i.e., herein referred to as the Nyquist rate), that satisfy

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Since the Nyquist criterion is derived based on the sampling theorem, the signals to which it is applied are inherently strictly bandlimited. To see this, ...

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