GB1565405A - Compatible am stereo broadcast system including transmitter and receiver - Google Patents

Compatible am stereo broadcast system including transmitter and receiver Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB1565405A
GB1565405A GB13174/77A GB1317477A GB1565405A GB 1565405 A GB1565405 A GB 1565405A GB 13174/77 A GB13174/77 A GB 13174/77A GB 1317477 A GB1317477 A GB 1317477A GB 1565405 A GB1565405 A GB 1565405A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
signal
carrier wave
amplitude
phase
combining
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
GB13174/77A
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Motorola Solutions Inc
Original Assignee
Motorola Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Motorola Inc filed Critical Motorola Inc
Publication of GB1565405A publication Critical patent/GB1565405A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04HBROADCAST COMMUNICATION
    • H04H20/00Arrangements for broadcast or for distribution combined with broadcast
    • H04H20/44Arrangements characterised by circuits or components specially adapted for broadcast
    • H04H20/46Arrangements characterised by circuits or components specially adapted for broadcast specially adapted for broadcast systems covered by groups H04H20/53-H04H20/95
    • H04H20/47Arrangements characterised by circuits or components specially adapted for broadcast specially adapted for broadcast systems covered by groups H04H20/53-H04H20/95 specially adapted for stereophonic broadcast systems
    • H04H20/49Arrangements characterised by circuits or components specially adapted for broadcast specially adapted for broadcast systems covered by groups H04H20/53-H04H20/95 specially adapted for stereophonic broadcast systems for AM stereophonic broadcast systems

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Stereo-Broadcasting Methods (AREA)
  • Selective Calling Equipment (AREA)

Description

(54) A COMPATIBLE AM STEREO BROADCAST SYSTEM INCLUDING TRANSMITTER AND RECEIVER (71) We, MOTOROLA, INC., a corporation organised and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware, United States of America, of Corporate Offices, Motorola Center, 1303 East Algonquin Road, Schaumburg, Illinois 60196, United States of America, do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement:- This invention relates to an AM stereo broadcast system for the transmission of two signals on a single carrier and more particularly to an improved system for transmitting and receiving fully compatible AM stereo signals on the AM broadcast band on monaural and stereo receivers without substantial distortion.
Several systems for transmitting and receiving AM stereo signals are known in the art. The simplest system is probably an unmodified quadrature signal which transmits two signals, A and B, e.g. left (L) and right (R), on two carriers which are identical in frequency but are in phase quadrature. This system is similar to the system used to transmit the two color signals on one carrier in the NTSC standard for U.S. color television transmission. On existing monaural receivers, using signal current rectifiers to derive the audio signal, however, there is double frequency distortion which is proportional to the amount of the stereo difference (L-R) signal. The distortion arises from the fact that this signal consists basically of the following:
where the term under the radical is the amplitude and where 8=tan-'(L-R)/(1+L+R).
The monaural receiver, however, requires that the amplitude of the received signal be substantially the carrier plus the audio, or (I+L+R). The (L-R) term thus represents distortion, and,-since it is a square term,-double frequency distortion.
The 8 term represents phase modulation and produces no output from a conventional envelope detector in a monaural receiver when there is no appreciable amplitude or phase distortion present on the signal in the entire system.
Still another prior system employs the technique of transmitting a single carrier, which is amplitude modulated with (L+R) information and frequency modulated with (L-R). The complex spectrum of the transmitted signal may give rise to undesirable distortion in both monaural and stereo receivers if any frequency or phase distortion is present in the received signal. When the (L-R) signal contains low frequency components, the radiated spectrum may contain many sideband frequencies which are subject to distortion in phase and amplitude which, in turn, produces spurious conversion of FM components to amplitude modulation.
Yet another system transmits sum and difference signals in quadrature, but distorts the (L+R) component to correct the amplitude of the envelope and make it compatible. This is done by changing the in-phase component from (1+L+R) to
and keeping the magnitude of the quadrature component unchanged. The phase or stereo information is thus distorted and the number of significant sidebands is increased, increasing the potential distortion on both monophonic and stereo receivers.
Thus. according to one aspect of the present invention there is provided a communication system wherein signal information corresponding to first and second intelligence signals is transmitted in quadrature and is compatible for both monophonic and stereophonic operation, comprising in combination; transmitter means for generating a single carrier wave amplitude modulated in accordance with the algebraic addition of said first and second intelligence signals and phase modulated by an angle whose tangent is the ratio of the difference between the first and second intelligence signals to the envelope of the ampitude modulated carrier, said carrier wave being fully compatible for reception and direct monophonic reproduction without substantial distortion, and receiver means for receiving said carrier wave and demodulating said first and second intelligence signals for stereophonic operation.
According to a further aspect of the invention there is provided a system for transmitting and receiving first (A) and second (B) intelligence signals on a single carrier wave, the system including in combination: transmitter means for providing the carrier wave which is amplitude modulated with a signal proportional to (A+B) and phase modulated with a signal proportional to an angle 0 having the form =arc tan[C1(A-B)/(C2+A+B)l where C, and C2 are constants equal to or less than one, and receiver means for receiving the transmitted signal and including means for separately decoding the first (A) and second (B) intelligence signals from the received signal.
According to a still further aspect of the invention there is provided a receiver for receiving a carrier wave which is amplitude modulated with a signal proportional to the sum of a first (A) and a second (B) intelligence signals, and which is phase modulated with the signal proportional to an angle (d having a form 0=arc tan C1(A-B)/(C2+A+B) where C1 and C2 are constants equal to or less than one, the receiver comprising corrector means for providing output signals substantially equal to the first and second intelligence signals.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a method of generating a single carrier wave signal representative of first and second intelligence signals in quadrature relation and which is compatible for both monophonic and stereophonic operation, comprising the steps of: providing a first unmodulated carrier wave signal of a predetermined frequency: amplitude modulating said first carrier wave signal with the sum of the first and second intelligence signals; providing a second unmodulated carrier wave signal of the predetermined frequency and in quadrature with the first carrier wave signal; amplitude modulating said second carrier wave with the difference of the first and second intelligence signals; combining said first and second modulated carrier wave signals; limiting the amplitude variation of said combined carrier wave signal to a predetermined value to provide a signal which is phase modulated by an angle whose tangent is the ratio of the difference between the first and second intelligence signals to the amplitude of the combined carrier wave signal, additively combining said first and second intelligence signals for amplitude modulating the phase modulated and limited carrier wave signal; said phase and amplitude modulated carrier wave being compatible for reception and direct monophonic reproduction of the signal information without substantial distortion.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided in an AM broadcast system, transmitter means for generating and transmitting a single carrier wave signal representative of first and second intelligence signals in quadrature relation and which is compatible for both monophonic and stereophonic operation, comprising in combination means for generating an unmodulated carrier wave signal of predetermined frequency, means for amplitude modulating said carrier wave with the instantaneous vector sum of the first and second intelligence signals, phase shifter means coupled to the generating means for providing a second unmodulated carrier wave signal of the predetermined frequency and in quadrature with the first carrier wave signal, means for amplitude modulating said second unmodulated carrier wave signal with the difference of the first and second intelligence signals, adder means for combining the first and second carrier waves, means for limiting the amplitude variation of said combined carrier waves to a predetermined value to provide a signal having only the phase variation due to the combined first and second carrier waves and means for amplitude modulating the limited carrier wave signal with the sum of the first and second intelligence signals.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a system for transmitting and receiving first (A) and second (B) intelligence signals on a single carrier wave, the system including in combination: transmitter means for providing the carrier wave which is amplitude modulated with a signal proportional to (A+B) and wherein the instantaneous phase varies as a function of (A-B) divided by (C+A+B) where C is a constant and receiver means for receiving the transmitted signal and including means for separately decoding the first (A) and second (B) intelligence signals from the received signal.
The invention will now be described by way of example only with particular reference to the accompanying drawings wherein: Figure 1 is a block diagram illustrative of a prior art system for transmitting and receiving two signals amplitude modulated in quadrature on a single carrier.
Figure 2 is a phasor diagram representative of the carrier and sidebands of the transmitted signal in the system of Figure 1.
Figure 3 is a block diagram of an AM stereo system of the present invention.
Figure 4 is a phasor diagram representative of the transmitted signal in the system of Figure 3.
Figure 5 is a block diagram of a transmitter compatible with the operational requirements of the invention.
Fig. 6 is a block diagram of a preferred embodiment of a receiver compatible with the operational requirements of the present invention.
Figure 7 is a circuit diagram of a portion of the receiver of Figure 6.
Figure 8 is a block diagram of still another receiver compatible with the system of the present invention.
Figure 9 is a block diagram of still another preferred embodiment of the receiver.
Figure 10 is a block diagram of a left-right SSB system.
Figure 11 is a block diagram of a receiver for the system of Figure 10.
Figure 12 is a spectrum diagram for the transmitted signal of Fig. 10.
Figure 13 is a block diagram of another SSB system and Figure 14 is a spectrum diagram for the transmitted signal of Figure 13.
The AM quadrature system of the prior art (Fig. 1) and the compatible system of the present invention (Fig. 3) will, for the sake of brevity, be described in terms of a stereo signal having left (L) and right (R) program channels, nevertheless, it will be understood that there is nothing inherent in the system to so limit it and the system is applicable to the transmission and reception of any two signals on a single carrier.
The system of the invention as shown in block form in Fig. 3 will be best understood in relation to the block diagram of Fig. I which is an unmodified and thus incompatible quadrature system. A quadrature transmitter, represented by a section 10 thereof, includes a program signal path from an input 11 which provides (I+L+R) to a modulator 12 and a second input 13 which provides (L-R) to a second modulator 14. An RF exciter 15 provides a carrier signal to the modulator 12 and, through a 90" phase shifter 16, to the modulator 14. The outputs of the two modulators are summed in signal adder 17 to provide a signal which is transmitted in the conventional fashion.This signal may be represented mathematically as
where P)=tan-'(L-R)/( 1 +L+ R). When this signal is received by a stereo receiver, as represented by a section 18 thereof, and demodulated in product detectors or multipliers 20 and 21, the respective signals (1+L+R) and (L-R) are obtained.
However, in the envelope detector 22 of a monaural receiver, indicated by dashed line 23, the demodulated output may be represented as
which it will be appreciated is compatible only for a signl wherein L=R, i.e.
monophonic.
The phasor diagram of Fig. 2 shows the locus 24 of the modulated transmitted signal for the system of Fig. 1. Phasor 25 represents the unmodulated carrier, 1 cos wt, with the phasors 26 representing the in-phase modulating signal (L+R) and the phasors 27, the quadrature signal (LR). 0 indicates the instantaneous phase angle of a resultant phasor 28 which, as the locus 24 shows, cannot exceed +45'.
A compatible AM stereo broadcast system of the invention is shown in block diagram form in Fig. 3. Again there are the two inputs 11' and 13', for (1+L+R) and (L-R), which are coupled to the two modulators 12' and 14' of a transmitter as partially shown by dashed line 30. The RF exciter 15' and the phase shifter 16' are as described in connection with Fig. 1. The outputs of the modulators 12' and 14' are summed in the adder 17'. Amplitude variations are then removed by a limiter 31, leaving only the phase information. The resulting phase modulated carrier may then be amplitude modulated by signal component (1 +L+R) in a high level modulator or multiplier 32.To give the transmitted signal which may be represented as (I+L+R) cos(t+), which is the equivalent of the original stereo signal from adder 17 multiplied by cos P) where
The transmitted signal is completely compatible, i.e., when this signal is received by the monophonic receiver 23 and demodulated by the envelope detector 22, the output is proportional to (L+R). When the transmitted signal is received by a stereo receiver as indicated at 33, it is limited in limiter 34. The resulting signal is a function of the stereo difference signal and is passed to the multiplier stage 35 with the phase of cos wt from a VCO 36 which is locked to the phase of the RF exciter 15 in the transmitter 30 in a manner to be described hereinafter.The phase difference is cos 8 and the output of the multiplier 35 is proportional to cos .
In a corrector circuit 37, which is further shown in Fig. 7 and will be described in detail hereinafter, the signal is divided by the output of the multiplier 35, which restores the original stereo output of the adder 17 as will be described. The cos wt signal from the VCO 36 is shifted +450 in phase shifters 38 and 39 and fed to multipliers 40 and 41, as is the output of the corrector circuit 37. The multipliers 40 and 41 provide outputs of L and R plus DC terms.
Fig. 4 which is the phasor diagram for the transmitted signal in the system of Fig. 3, has a modified locus 45. Each point within the locus 45 corresponds to a point or value within the locus 24 multiplied by cos . Multiplication by cos 9) produces the minimum number of higher order sidebands consistent with the transmission of a compatible monophonic signal with minimum distortion.
In Fig. 5 part of the transmitter is shown in block 49. In a monaural transmitter, the carrier frequency from the crystal oscillator 15 would be coupled to the modulator 32. The carrier frequency from the oscillator 15 is divided and one part is shifted 90" in the phase shifter 16. The two carriers in quadrature are then coupled to the modulators 12 and 14 and the modulator outputs are connected to the adder 17. A portion of the unshifted and unmodulated carrier is also connected to the adder 17 through a carrier level control 50 to establish the level of the unmodulated carrier. The adder 17 output is limited in limiter 31 to remove amplitude modulation, thereby leaving the carrier modulated with the phase information only, to be coupled to the high level modulator 32.Each of the program channel inputs 52 (L) and 53 (R) has a program level limiter 54 and 55 and a monitoring meter 56, 57. The Land R signals are combined (L+R) in the adder 58 which is connected to the multiplier 12. The R signal is inverted by the inverter 60 and combined (L-R) in the adder 61 which is connected to multiplier 14. A second output of the (L+R) adder 58 is connected through a time delay circuit 62 to the high level modulator 32. The time delay 62 provides a delay equal to that of the modifying circuits 49. The output of the modulator 32 is then a signal which is amplitude modulated with (L+R) information and phase modulated with information which is a function of the stereo difference signal.
Fig. 6 shows the stereo receiver 33 of Fig. 3 in somewhat more detail. The received signal passed through an RF-mixer-IF amplifier section 65, the design of which is entirely conventional as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art without further operational description. The amplitude modulation on the signal at the output 66b of the section 65 is removed in the limiter 34. The output of the limiter 34 may be represented as cos(wt+8) is applied to one input of the in-phase detector or multiplier 35 and also to one input of a quadrature detector or multiplier 70. The multiplier 70 forms an integral part of a phase locked loop identified at 71. A low pass filter 72 prevents rapid phase changes from reaching a VCO 36 while allowing phase drift to pass through.The output of the VCO, then, is controlled very closely and, since it is in quadrature to the transmitter oscillator 15, it is coupled to a 7r/2 or 900 phase shifter 73. The resultant cos ot output of the phase shifter 73 is connected to a second input of the multiplier 35. The output 74 of the multiplier 35 which may be represented as 1o cos 0 is coupled to the corrector circuit 37. In the corrector circuit 37, an embodiment of which is shown in detail in Fig. 7, the signal appearing at 66a is divided by the output of the multiplier 35, thus restoring the quadrature signal. The remainder of the circuit is substantially as described with regard to Fig. 3.
In Fig. 7, an embodiment of a portion of the receiver 33 is depicted which will satisfactorily provide the above-described functions of the multiplier 35 and the corrector circuit 37. The phase detector or multiplier 35 receives an input from the limiter 34 on terminal 80. The limiter output switches a differential pair of transistors 81 and 82 in alternately conductive states in synchronism with the incoming carrier signal from the limiter 34. A reference input signal at terminal 84, derived from the phase locked loop 71, is supplied to the transistor or current source 83 by the output of the phase shifter 73. The phase shifter 73 also serves as a low pass filter, providing an essentially sinusoidal reference current to the transistor 83. A DC reference voltage at point 85 is supplied by an emitter follower 88 which is coupled to the differential pair 81, 82.A current mirror 87 balances out any static current from transistor 83 at the differential pair output 74, so that the output current is proportional to the cosine of the angular difference between the input signals 80 and 84. An integrating capacitor 86 smoothes the current impulses from the multiplier 35.
In order that the multiplier output 74 follow closely a cosine function, one of the inputs 80 or 84 must be relatively free of higher order harmonics. By making the phase shifting network 73 a low pass filter, odd order harmonics from the oscillator's square wave are removed.
The corrector circuit 37 preferably consists of a differential amplifier having a pair of transistors 100 and 101. Current for the emitters of transistors 100 and 101 is supplied by a current source 102. Two transistors 103 and 104 form a current mirror so that the current in the transistor 104 is equal to the current in transistor 100.
When the currents in transistors 100 and 101 are equal, the current in the transistor 104 equals the current in the transistor 101 and the current Io is zero.
The signal voltage derived from the signal input 66a is applied between the bases of the transistors 100 and 101 respectively through two resistors 108 and 109, two diodes 110 and 111 and a reference voltage source 112. The reference voltage source 112 consists of an emitter follower 113 coupled to a voltage divider means consisting of three resistors 114, 115 and 116. The base of the transistor 113 is connected to the junction of the resistors 114 and 115 to provide a reference voltage. The emitter of the emitter follower 113 provides a low impedance voltage reference for the pair of transistors 100 and 101 forming the differential amplifier.
A current Ir from the multiplier 35 flows through the diodes 110 and 111, the resistors 108 and 109, the voltage source 112 and the input signal source 66a to provide forward bias for the diodes 110 and 111.
The forward impedance of the diodes 110 and 111, together with resistors 108 and 109, provide a voltage divider so that the voltage applied between the base of transistor 100 and the base of transistor 101 is reduced by the ratio of the forward resistance of diodes 110 and 111 to the resistors 108 and 109.
The corrector circuit 37 will now be described in terms of its currents and the output of the multiplier 35, Ir=I max cos . The output current may be represented by Io=I,IJlr, where It is supplied by a current source 102. Is is the input signal current at terminal 66a and may be represented as e,"2r where 2r equals the sum of the two resistors 91 which are large value resistors. eS may be taken as equal to ec(l+L+R) cos(ct+), where ec is the amplitude of the unmodulated carrier. 1max is the peak signal current in the transistor 83.Therefore Is=[Iec(l+L+R) cos(wt+)]/2 r, and IO=[I,ec(l+L+R) cos(w,t+8)1/2 rlmax cos 8.
Since
which is the desired quadrature signal.
Fig. 8 shows a portion of another embodiment of a receiver compatible with the operational requirements of the present invention, wherein the corrector circuit 37 is in the audio portion of the receiver, and is, in fact, two identical corrector circuits 37a and 37b. The output 66 of the RF-mixer-IF amplifier 65 can now be a single output connected to multipliers 40 and 41. The output of the multiplier 40 is L cos 0 and goes to corrector circuit 37a where it is divided by cos providing an L output. The output of multiplier circuit 41 is R cos P) and is connected to the corrector circuit 37b where it is divided by cos providing an R output. The output current at point 74 of the multiplier 35 is divided and applied to both correctors 37a and 37b.
Fig. 9 shows still another receiver embodiment similar to those of Figs. 7 and 8.
There the corrector circuit 37c has inputs 83 and 74 from the phase shifter 73 and the multiplier 35 respectively. The output 95 of the corrector circuit 37c is connected to the inputs of the phase shifters 38 and 39 and is the reference voltage divided by cos . The outputs of the multipliers 40 and 41 thus become L and R respectively.
Fig. 10 is a block diagram of a left-right SSB system having a transmitter similar to that of Fig. 5, that is, a quadrature system with the cos PI change. The L and R inputs are combined additively in adder 58 and subtractively in adder 61.
The output of adder 61 is then phase shifted 90" in phase shifter 95 and fed to the transmitter as before. The required stereo receiver would have the decoding angles changed to derive outputs (L+R) such as indicated at 96 and (LR),ri2 such as indicated at 97. The output 97 is phase shifted by -'ti2 in a phase shifter 98 and the output connected to receiver matrix 99 as is the output 96. The output of the matrix 99 is, of course, L and R.
Fig. 11 shows a detail of the receiver of Fig. 10, wherein the corrector circuit 37 is connected to the output 66 of the receiver RF-mixer-IF amplifier 65, the output of the corrector 37 is coupled to the multipliers 40 and 41 and the phase locked loop and phase shifting networks are the same as described with regard to Fig. 6. As described above with regard to Fig. 10 the one output 97 is phase shifted and both outputs go to a matrix circuit 99 to provide L and R outputs.
Fig. 12 is a spectrum diagram showing that in the transmitted signal the L signals are contained in one set of sidebands and the R signals in the other set of sidebands. The signal, of course, also includes higher order correction sidebands which are transmitted double sideband.
Fig. 13 is a block diagram of another single sideband system similar to that of Fig. 10. In this embodiment one of the program input signals, e.g., R, is phase shifted by 90" in phase shifter 95. The phase shifted signal then goes to adder 58 and inverter 60, thence to adder 61. The second program signal, e.g., L, goes directly to adders 58 and 61. The outputs of the adders 58 and 61 are (L+Rni2) and (L-Rni2) respectively. These signals are modulated on to the carrier as before in the transmitter having the cosine correction. When received by a quadrature receiver with cosine correction, the corrected signals come out as L and Rani2 and the R signal is shifted 90" lagging in phase shifter 98.
Fig. 14 is a spectrum diagram of the transmitted signal showing that the sum and difference signals are transmitted single sideband. The correction information transmitted double sideband.
Thus, by multiplying a quadrature signal by the cosine of an angle 8 before transmission and dividing by the same cosine in the receiver, the system provides a signal which is completely compatible in monophonic receivers and easily decoded in stereophonic receivers. The signal as transmitted has all of the advantages of quadrature modulation without causing distortion in an envelope detector. It provides a minimum of monophonic coverage lost due to skywave distortion and, at the same time, optimum stereo performance. The system is compatible with monophonic receivers using either envelope detection or synchronous detection.
For best performance with synchronous detectors a corrector circuit is desirable but reasonable performance can be obtained by an unmodified synchronous receiver.

Claims (16)

WHAT WE CLAIM IS:
1. A communication system wherein signal information corresponding to first and second intelligence signals is transmitted in quadrature and is compatible for both monophonic and stereophonic operation, comprising in combination; transmitter means for generating a single carrier wave amplitude modulated in accordance with the algebraic addition of said first and second intelligence signals and phase modulated by an angle whose tangent is the ratio of the difference between the first and second intelligence signals to the envelope of the amplitude modulated carrier said carrier wave being fully compatible for reception and direct monophonic reproduction without substantial distortion, and receiver means for receiving said carrier wave and demodulating said first and second intelligence signals for stereophonic operation.
2. A system as claimed in Claim 1 wherein the transmitter means comprises: a first intelligence signal source; a second signal intelligence source; a carrier wave source; first combining means for combining additively the first and second intelligence signals; second combining means for combining subtractively the first and second intelligence signals; means for amplitude modulating quadrature carrier waves in response to the outputs of the first and second combining means; means for limiting the amplitude of the combined modulated carrier waves and means for amplitude modulating the limited carrier wave in response to the output of the first combining means.
3. A system as claimed in Claim 1 wherein the transmitter means comprises: a first intelligence signal source; a second intelligence signal source; a carrier wave source; first combining means for combining additively the first and second intelligence signals; second combining means for combining subtractively the first and second intelligence signals; phase shifting means coupled to receive at least one of the outputs of the first and second combining means for shifting the phase of at least one of said outputs and for providing a 90" phase difference between said outputs; means for amplitude modulating the carrier wave in quadrature in response to the outputs of the phase shifting means; means for limiting the amplitude of the modulated carrier wave; means for amplitude modulating the limited carrier wave in response to the output of the first combining means and wherein the receiver means includes phase shifting means for restoring the original phase relationship of the outputs of the first and second combining means of the transmitter means.
4. A system as claimed in Claim 1 wherein the transmitting means comprises; a first intelligence signal source; a second intelligence signal source; a carrier wave source; phase shifting means coupled to receive at least one of the first and second intelligence signals for shifting the phase of at least one of said intelligence signals to provide a 90" phase difference between said intelligence signals; first combining means for combining additively the outputs of the phase shifting means; second combining means for combining subtractively the outputs of the phase shifting means; means for amplitude modulating the carrier wave in response to the outputs of the first and second combining means; means for limiting the amplitude of the modulated carrier wave; means for amplitude modulating the limited carrier wave in response to the output of the first combining means and wherein the receiver means further includes phase shifting means for restoring the original phase relationship of the first and second intelligence signals.
5. A system for transmitting and receiving first (A) and second (B) intelligence signals on a single carrier wave, the system including in combination; transmitter means for providing the carrier wave which is amplitude modulated with a signal proportional lo (A+B) and phase modulated with a signal proportional to an angle 8 having the form narc tan[C1(A-B)/(C2+A+B)l where C1 and C2 are constants equal to or less than one, and receiver means for receiving the transmitted signal and including means for separately decoding the first (A) and second (B) intelligence signals from the received signal.
6. A system as claimed in Claim 5 wherein the decoding means comprises means for dividing the received signal by said signal which is a function of the angle .
7. A system as claimed in Claim 6 wherein said signal which is a function of the angle 8 is proportional to the cosine of the angle .
8. A system as claimed in Claim 5 wherein the receiver means includes input means for providing a signal in response to the received signal and the decoding means includes corrector means coupled to receive the responsive signal for providing substantially the first and second intelligence signals.
9. A receiver for use in the system claimed in Claim 1 and for receiving a carrier wave which is amplitude modulated with a signal proportional to the sum of a first (A) and a second (B) intelligence signals, and which is phase modulated with the signal proportional to an angle 8 having a form =arc tan [C1(A-B)/(C2+A+B)] where C1 and C2 are constants equal to or less than one, the receiver comprising corrector means for providing output signals substantially equal to the first and second intelligence signals, and the circuit means for providing a signal in response to the received signal and the corrector means being coupled to said circuit means for dividing said responsive signal by the cosine of the angle .
10. In a stereo receiver for use in the system claimed in Claim 1 and receiving a carrier wave modulated with amplitude and phase information, a corrector network for correcting the received signal, the network comprising: first circuit means for providing a first signal proportional in amplitude to the amplitude information on the carrier wave; second circuit means for providing a second signal proportional in amplitude to the phase information on the carrier wave; and corrector circuit means for combining the first signal with the second signal to provide an output signal proportional to the first signal and inversely proportional to the second signal.
11. A method of generating a single carrier wave signal representative of first and second intelligence signals in quadrature relation and which is compatible for both monophonic and stereophonic operation, comprising the steps of: providing a first unmodulated carrier wave signal of a predetermined frequency; amplitude modulating said first carrier wave signal with the sum of the first and second intelligence signals; providing a second unmodulated carrier wave signal of the predetermined frequency and in quadrature with the first carrier wave signal; amplitude modulating said second carrier wave with the difference of the first and second intelligence signals; combining said first and second modulated carrier wave signals; limiting the amplitude variation of said combined carrier wave signal to a predetermined value to provide a signal which is phase modulated by an angle whose tangent is the ratio of the difference between the first and second intelligence signals to the amplitude of the combined carrier wave signal, additively combining said first and second intelligence signals for amplitude modulating the phase modulated and limited carrier wave signal; said phase and amplitude modulated carrier wave being compatible for reception and direct monophonic reproduction of the signal information without substantial distortion.
12. In an AM broadcast system, transmitter means for generating and transmitting a single carrier wave signal representative of first and second intelligence signals in quadrature relation and which is compatible for both monophonic and stereophonic operation, comprising in combination means for generating an unmodulated carrier wave signal of predetermined frequency, means for amplitude modulating said carrier wave with the instantaneous vector sum of the first and second intelligence signals, phase shifter means coupled to the generating means for providing a second unmodulated carrier wave signal of the predetermined frequency and in quadrature with the first carrier wave signal, means for amplitude modulating said second unmodulated carrier wave signal with the difference of the first and second intelligence signals, adder means for combining the first and second carrier waves, means for limiting the amplitude variation of said combined carrier waves to a predetermined value to provide a signal having only the phase variation due to the combined first and second carrier waves and means for amplitude modulating the limited carrier wave signal with the sum of the first and second intelligence signals.
13. A system for transmitting and receiving first (A) and second (B) intelligence signals on a single carrier wave, the system including in combination: transmitter means for providing the carrier wave which is amplitude modulated with a signal proportional to (A+B) and wherein the instantaneous phase varies as a function of (A-B) divided by (C+A+B) where C is a constant and receiver means for receiving the transmitted signal and including means for separately decoding the first (A) and second (B) intelligence signals from the received signal.
14. A communication system substantially as hereinbefore described and as shown in Figures 3 to 14 of the accompanying drawings.
15. A receiver substantially as hereinbefore described and as shown in Figures 6 and 7 or Figure 8 or Figure 9 or Figures 10 to 12 of the accompanying drawings.
16. A transmitter substantially as hereinbefore described and as shown in Figure 5 of the accompanying drawings.
GB13174/77A 1976-04-07 1977-03-29 Compatible am stereo broadcast system including transmitter and receiver Expired GB1565405A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US67470376A 1976-04-07 1976-04-07

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB1565405A true GB1565405A (en) 1980-04-23

Family

ID=24707610

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB13174/77A Expired GB1565405A (en) 1976-04-07 1977-03-29 Compatible am stereo broadcast system including transmitter and receiver

Country Status (18)

Country Link
JP (3) JPS6034299B2 (en)
AR (1) AR215622A1 (en)
BR (1) BR7702238A (en)
CA (1) CA1095992A (en)
DE (1) DE2715741C2 (en)
ES (1) ES457535A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2353182A1 (en)
GB (1) GB1565405A (en)
HK (1) HK1281A (en)
IL (1) IL51777A (en)
IT (1) IT1078165B (en)
MX (1) MX144185A (en)
MY (1) MY8100295A (en)
NL (1) NL178831C (en)
NO (1) NO156470C (en)
PT (1) PT66413B (en)
SE (1) SE426639B (en)
ZA (1) ZA772160B (en)

Families Citing this family (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
NL180062C (en) * 1977-09-27 Motorola Inc RADIO RECEIVER.
US4170716A (en) * 1977-10-14 1979-10-09 Motorola, Inc. AM stereo receiver with correction limiting
JPS5829903B2 (en) * 1977-11-09 1983-06-25 山水電気株式会社 Amplitude modulation stereo receiver
US4172966A (en) * 1978-02-23 1979-10-30 Motorola, Inc. AM stereophonic receiver
US4589127A (en) * 1978-06-05 1986-05-13 Hazeltine Corporation Independent sideband AM multiphonic system
US4220818A (en) * 1979-05-21 1980-09-02 Kahn Leonard R AM Stereo transmitter
JPS6029251Y2 (en) * 1979-11-29 1985-09-04 ソニー株式会社 AM stereo receiver
US4371747A (en) * 1980-03-24 1983-02-01 Motorola, Inc. AM Stereophonic decoder

Family Cites Families (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR1271952A (en) * 1958-11-14 1961-09-22 Carrier wave teletransmission method and device
US3007005A (en) * 1959-02-12 1961-10-31 Philco Corp Transmitter for stereophonic information signals
FR1250343A (en) * 1959-04-08 1961-01-06 Philco Corp Silent adjustment circuit for stereo signal receivers
US3068475A (en) * 1959-10-07 1962-12-11 Rca Corp Stereophonic sound signalling system
US3067293A (en) * 1959-11-19 1962-12-04 Philco Corp Single channel stereophonic broad-casting system
US3218393A (en) * 1960-02-11 1965-11-16 Leonard R Kahn Compatible stereophonic transmission and reception systems, and methods and components characterizing same
FR1279867A (en) * 1960-02-11 1961-12-22 Method and installation for stereo transmission and reception

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
NO156470B (en) 1987-06-15
JPS6034299B2 (en) 1985-08-08
HK1281A (en) 1981-01-23
NL7703912A (en) 1977-10-11
JPS6237580B2 (en) 1987-08-13
PT66413B (en) 1978-09-15
DE2715741A1 (en) 1977-10-13
BR7702238A (en) 1978-01-17
MX144185A (en) 1981-09-09
FR2353182B1 (en) 1984-10-05
IT1078165B (en) 1985-05-08
JPS58184841A (en) 1983-10-28
ES457535A1 (en) 1978-03-01
CA1095992A (en) 1981-02-17
NO156470C (en) 1987-09-23
FR2353182A1 (en) 1977-12-23
AR215622A1 (en) 1979-10-31
DE2715741C2 (en) 1986-09-11
JPS6256705B2 (en) 1987-11-26
SE426639B (en) 1983-01-31
SE7703666L (en) 1977-10-08
JPS58184842A (en) 1983-10-28
IL51777A0 (en) 1977-05-31
PT66413A (en) 1977-05-01
JPS52141502A (en) 1977-11-25
NL178831B (en) 1985-12-16
NO771139L (en) 1977-10-10
ZA772160B (en) 1978-03-29
IL51777A (en) 1978-12-17
NL178831C (en) 1986-05-16
MY8100295A (en) 1981-12-31

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP0305603B1 (en) Gain and phase correction in a dual branch receiver
US4018994A (en) Compatible AM stereophonic receivers
GB970051A (en) Compatible stereophonic transmission and reception systems,and methods and components characterizing same
US4218586A (en) Compatible AM stereo broadcast system
US4622694A (en) Transmission system for TV signals on radio links
US3534172A (en) Radio transmission system and transmitter and receiver for transmission of stereophonic signal to be used in this system
US4192968A (en) Receiver for compatible AM stereo signals
US4589127A (en) Independent sideband AM multiphonic system
CA1095992A (en) Compatible am stereo broadcast system
US4493099A (en) FM Broadcasting system with transmitter identification
US4236042A (en) Compatible AM stereo system employing a modified quadrature modulation scheme
GB1600549A (en) Low frequency am stereophonic broadcasting system
US4185171A (en) Compatible single sideband system for AM stereo broadcasting
EP0019466B1 (en) Signal generating apparatus for independent sideband (isb) am stereo radio transmitters
US4472831A (en) AM Stereophonic transmitter
US4184046A (en) Compatible single sideband system for AM stereo
KR910003418B1 (en) Am sterero decoder for multiple coding systems
US4406922A (en) Stereo broadcast system
JPS6259941B2 (en)
KR860000232B1 (en) Compatible am stereo broadcast system
KR810000344B1 (en) Transmitter
CA1122658A (en) Compatible am stereo broadcast system
KR810000345B1 (en) Receive
US4680794A (en) AM stereo system with modified spectrum
CA1120106A (en) Compatible am stereo broadcast system

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PS Patent sealed [section 19, patents act 1949]
PE20 Patent expired after termination of 20 years

Effective date: 19970328