• DocumentCode
    3349815
  • Title

    Pulse code modulation: invented for microwaves, used everywhere

  • Author

    Cattermole, K.W.

  • Author_Institution
    Essex Univ., Colchester, UK
  • fYear
    1995
  • fDate
    5-7 Sep 1995
  • Firstpage
    184
  • Lastpage
    186
  • Abstract
    The inventor of PCM, Alec H. Reeves, was seeking a modulation technique which could match the capabilities, and the limitations, of the newly-developed microwave channels. By a deep irony of technological history, PCM in its basic form turned out to be ill-adapted to the microwave channels which emerged from pioneer investigations into practical use. It was first employed in line communication, and only after widespread penetration into terrestrial line networks did it make much headway into radio systems. The great stimulus to the invention of PCM was the collateral development of microwave radio: but by the time that PCM became a practical system for telephony, microwave radio had for good reasons developed along analogue lines. There was however an obvious application for PCM on cable, which led to near-universal implementation on transmission routes and ultimately to the digital integrated network. Digital techniques spread back into radio systems only after widespread usage elsewhere, and much technical development to adapt them to the medium
  • Keywords
    microwave links; pulse amplitude modulation; digital integrated network; line communication; microwave channels; microwave radio; pulse code modulation; radio systems; telephony; terrestrial line networks;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    iet
  • Conference_Titel
    100 Years of Radio., Proceedings of the 1995 International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    London
  • ISSN
    0537-9989
  • Print_ISBN
    0-85296-649-0
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1049/cp:19950810
  • Filename
    491812