2. DEFINITION OF PAM
ď‚— Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM) is the transmission
of data by varying the amplitude s
( voltage or power levels) of the individual pulses in a
regularly timed sequence of electrical or electromagnetic
pulses.
ď‚— The number of possible pulse
amplitudes can be infinite
(in the case of analog PAM),
but it is usually some power
of two so that the resulting
outputsignal can be digital .
5. TYPES OF PAM
There are two types of pulse amplitude
modulation:
Single polarity PAM:
In this a suitable fixed DC bias is
added to the signal to ensure that all the
pulses are positive.
Double polarity PAM:
In this the pulses are both positive
and negative.
6. GENERATION OF PAM
ď‚— Pulse amplitude modulation is the basic form of pulse
modulation in which the signal is sampled at regular and
each sample is made proportional to the amplitude of the
modulating signal at the sampling instant.
ď‚— The Fig shows the generation of PAM signal from the
sampler which has two inputs i.e. modulating signal and
sampling signal or carrier pulse.
7. ď‚— Thus the amplitude
of the signal is
proportional to the
modulating signal
through which
information is carried.
This is Pulse amplitude
modulation signal.
ď‚— Pulse Modulation may be used to transmitting analog
information, such as continuous speech signal or data.