Amplitude and phase-shift keying
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Modulation techniques |
|---|
| Analog modulation |
| AM · SSB · FM · PM · QAM · SM |
| Digital modulation |
| OOK · FSK · ASK · PSK · QAM MSK · CPM · PPM · TCM · OFDM |
| Spread spectrum |
| FHSS · DSSS |
Amplitude and Phase-shift keying or Asymmetric Phase-shift keying, (APSK), is a digital modulation scheme that conveys data by changing, or modulating, both the amplitude and the phase of a reference signal (the carrier wave). In other words, it combines both Amplitude-shift keying (ASK) and Phase-shift keying (PSK) to increase the symbol-set. It can be considered as a subclass of Quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM). The advantage over conventional QAM, for example 16-QAM, is lower number of possible amplitude levels, resulting in less problems with non-linear amplifiers.
[edit] Applications
The DVB-S2 specification permits the use of 16APSK and 32APSK modes, allowing 16 and 32 different symbols respectively and are intended for mainly professional, semi-linear applications. They can be also used for broadcasting but they require a higher level of available C/N and an adoption of advanced pre-distortion methods in the uplink station in order to minimize the effect of transponder non-linearity.
Figure - Bit mapping into constellations - (see Ref.2)
[edit] References
- DVB-S2 — ready for lift off, article in the EBU technical review

