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Pulse-amplitude modulation
Pulse-amplitude modulation, acronym PAM, is a form of signal modulation where the message information is encoded in the amplitude of a series of signal pulses.
Example: A two bit modulator (4-PAM) will take two bits at a time and will map the signal amplitude to one of four possible levels, for example −3 volts, −1 volt, 1 volt, and 3 volts.
Demodulation is performed by detecting the amplitude level of the carrier at every symbol period.
Pulse-amplitude modulation is now rarely used, having been largely superseded by pulse-code modulation, and, more recently, by pulse-position modulation.
In particular, all telephone modems faster than 300 bits/s use quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM). (QAM uses a two-dimensional constellation).
See also
- Pulse-code modulation
- Pulse-position modulation
- Pulse-width modulation
- Pulse-density modulation
- Pulse forming network
- quadrature amplitude modulation
Last updated: 08-10-2005 10:33:37
10-26-2009 08:16:03
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The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


