• DocumentCode
    1966359
  • Title

    Vector signal analyzer implemented as a synthetic instrument

  • Author

    Lowdermilk, Wade ; Harris, Fred

  • Author_Institution
    BAE Syst., San Diego
  • fYear
    2007
  • fDate
    17-20 Sept. 2007
  • Firstpage
    157
  • Lastpage
    166
  • Abstract
    Synthetic Instruments use the substantial signal processing assets of a field programmable gate array (FPGA) to perform the multiple tasks of targeted digital signal processing (DSP) based instruments. The signal conditioning common to many instruments includes analog spectral translation, filtering, and gain control to align the bandwidth and dynamic range of the input signal to the bandwidth and dynamic range capabilities of the A-to-D converter (ADC) which moves the signal from the analog domain to the sampled data domain. Once in the sampled data domain, the signal processing performed by the FPGA includes digital spectral translation, filtering, and gain control to perform its chartered DSP tasks. A common DSP task is spectral analysis from which frequency dependent (i.e., spectral) amplitude and phase is extracted from an input time signal. Another high interest DSP task is vector signal analysis from which time dependent (i.e., temporal) amplitude and phase is extracted from the input time signal. With access to the time varying amplitude-phase profiles of the input signal, the vector signal analyzer can present many of the quality measures of a modulation process. These include estimates of undesired attributes such as modulator distortion, phase noise, clock-jitter, l-Q imbalance, inter-symbol interference, and others. Here, the boundary between synthetic instruments (SI) and software defined radios (SDR) becomes very thin indeed. Essentially this is where the SI is asked to become a smart SDR, performing all the tasks of a DSP radio receiver and reporting small variations between the observed modulated signal parameters and those of an ideal modulated signal. Various quality measures (e.g., the size of errors) have value in qualifying and probing performance boundaries of communication systems.
  • Keywords
    analogue-digital conversion; computerised instrumentation; field programmable gate arrays; signal processing; software radio; A-to-D converter; digital signal processing; field programmable gate array; software defined radios; synthetic instrument; vector signal analyzer; Array signal processing; Bandwidth; Digital signal processing; Dynamic range; Field programmable gate arrays; Filtering; Gain control; Instruments; Signal analysis; Signal processing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Autotestcon, 2007 IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Baltimore, MD
  • ISSN
    1088-7725
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-1239-6
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1088-7725
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/AUTEST.2007.4374215
  • Filename
    4374215