What is Phase and Amplitude Noise?
A perfect sinusoidal oscillator would
produce an ideal sine wave s(t)
= A sin(wt) ..
(1.1) but
in practice the signal always contains some noise. This can be
represented by fluctuations in the amplitude of the signal (variations in A)
and by fluctuations in the signal phase (so phase becomes wt +
phase noise). In general
we can represent the noisy oscillator signal as s(t)
= (A + a(t)) sin(wt + f(t)) ..
(1.2) where: a(t)
represents the amplitude fluctuations in the signal - the amplitude
noise and
f(t) represents the phase fluctuations or
the phase noise. Notice that
the amplitude noise does not affect the zero crossings and that the phase
noise does not affect the amplitude of the signal peaks. Well designed
signal sources have small amplitude noise. Amplitude noise can
also be removed using automatic level control (ALC) systems, or by
passing the signal through a limiting amplifier. (The output
of an ideal limiting amplifier is determined only by the zero crossings of the
signal, and these are unaffected by the amplitude noise.) Amplitude
noise is also rejected to some degree by many of the mixers used in radio
systems. Phase noise is another
matter. Once present on a signal it is very difficult to
remove, and as will be explained later, it can have a major
impact on system performance. Thus for the rest of this
reference, we will assume that the signal contains only phase noise
and so is of the form s(t)
= A sin(wt + f(t)) ..
(1.3) In
the time domain, if the signal s(t) from (3) was viewed on an
ideal oscilloscope, the effect of f(t)
would be to cause timing jitter on the zero crossings of the
waveform. 
Figure
1 - Signal with very bad phase noise This timing jitter can be significant in many
applications, for example if s(t) is used as a data clock in
a digital transmission systems, the timing jitter could cause
erroneous data sampling. This is not the major concern to
radio engineers, the phase noise usually has to be severe (as in
Figure 1) to cause
significant timing errors. Levels
of phase noise that are far too small to detect on an oscilloscope can
cause changes to the spectrum of a signal that can be very important in
radio applications . Such minute amounts of phase noise on a
transmitter signal can result in the transmitter causing significant
interference to other services, whereas minute
amounts of phase noise on a receiver local oscillator can
severely reduce the receiver selectivity or cause other undesirable effects.
These effects are of major concern to
radio engineers and are addressed in later sections.
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