Summary: Introduces a method for representing bits with an analog signal known as binary phase shift keying.
A commonly used example of a signal set consists of pulses that are negatives of each other (Figure 1).
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      This way of representing a bit stream---changing the bit changes
      the sign of the transmitted signal---is known as binary
      phase shift keying and abbreviated BPSK. The name comes from concisely expressing this popular way of communicating digital information. The word "binary" is clear
      enough (one binary-valued quantity is transmitted during a bit
      interval). Changing the sign of sinusoid amounts to
      changing---shifting---the phase by 
      The datarate 
The choice of signals to represent bit values is arbitrary to some degree. Clearly, we do not want to choose signal set members to be the same; we couldn't distinguish bits if we did so. We could also have made the negative-amplitude pulse represent a 0 and the positive one a 1. This choice is indeed arbitrary and will have no effect on performance assuming the receiver knows which signal represents which bit. As in all communication systems, we design transmitter and receiver together.
A simple signal set for both wireless and wireline channels amounts to amplitude modulating a baseband signal set (more appropriate for a wireline channel) by a carrier having a frequency harmonic with the bit interval.
      
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	What is the value of 
  
	  
This signal set is also known as a BPSK signal set. We'll show later that indeed both signal sets provide identical performance levels when the signal-to-noise ratios are equal.
Write a formula, in the style of the baseband signal set, for the transmitted signal as shown in the plot of the baseband signal set that emerges when we use this modulated signal.
	  
    What is the transmission bandwidth of these signal sets?  We need
      only consider the baseband version as the second is an
      amplitude-modulated version of the first. The bandwidth is
      determined by the bit sequence.  If the bit sequence is
      constant—always 0 or always 1—the transmitted signal
      is a constant, which has zero bandwidth. The
      worst-case—bandwidth consuming—bit sequence is the
      alternating one shown in Figure 4. In this case, the transmitted signal is a square
      wave having a period of
      
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      From our work in Fourier series, we know that this signal's
      spectrum contains odd-harmonics of the fundamental, which here
      equals
      
	  Show that indeed the first and third harmonics contain 90%
	  of the transmitted power. If the receiver uses a front-end
	  filter of bandwidth
	  
The harmonic distortion is 10%.
What is the 90% transmission bandwidth of the modulated signal set?
	  Twice the baseband bandwidth because both positive and
	  negative frequencies are shifted to the carrier by the
	  modulation:
	  
	  
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