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Journal ArticleDOI

The spectrum of modulated pulses

E. Fitch
- 01 Dec 1947 - 
- Vol. 94, Iss: 13, pp 556-564
TLDR
In this paper, the spectrum of a train of rectangular pulses sinusoidally modulated in any one of these ways is derived, and it is shown that in none of these methods is there any harmonic distortion or audio crosstalk.
Abstract
Some methods proposed for evaluating the spectra of modulated pulse trains are discussed. The basic pulse-frequency, -phase, -length and -amplitude modulation systems are defined and the spectrum of a train of rectangular pulses sinusoidally modulated in any one of these ways is derived. Modulation by more than one tone is also considered. It is shown that in none of these methods is there any harmonic distortion or audio crosstalk. Anharmonic distortion arises from sidebands of harmonics of the pulse repetition frequency, and graphs are given to illustrate its magnitude. The formulae are extended to cover non-rectangular pulses, and it is shown that the distortions to be expected are practically the same as for rectangular pulses. The reproduction of transients is briefly examined. It seems that they suffer little distortion in form but that their timing is modified by the pulse modulation, the maximum time-shift being half the pulse repetition period.

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Citations
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Journal Article

Some aspects of the spectrum of modulated pulses

TL;DR: In this article, a modified method of deriving the spectrum of modulated pulses is given, and it is shown that there are two distinct types among the basic pulse frequency and pulse phase modulation systems.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A digitally corrected ADC using a passive pulse frequency modulator

TL;DR: It is shown in this paper how the nonlinearity can be corrected in the signal post-processing by a simple algorithm depending only on the RC time constant operating on the decimated data and circuit parameters that could be known.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Transmission of Television Sound on the Picture Carrier

TL;DR: In this article, the advantages of duplex transmission were analyzed from the point of view of signal-to-noise ratio, audio fidelity, and transmitter and receiver design. But the advantages were not as great as the ratio offered by the transmission of a standard frequency-modulated carrier.
Journal ArticleDOI

A method of transmitting sound on the vision carrier of a television system

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe a television system in which sound pulses having a constant height and variable width are inserted in the line synchronizing periods, which leads to a simplified receiver and improves the program quality in the presence of severe interference.
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