![]() |
|||||||||||||
|
Phase modulation |
| Modulation techniques |
|---|
| Analog modulation |
| AM · SSB · FM · PM · SM |
| Digital modulation |
| OOK · FSK · ASK · PSK · QAM MSK · CPM · PPM · TCM · OFDM |
| Spread spectrum |
| FHSS · DSSS |
| See also: Demodulation |
Phase modulation (PM) is a form of modulation that represents information as variations in the instantaneous phase of a carrier wave.
Unlike its more popular counterpart, frequency modulation (FM), PM is not very widely used. This is because it tends to require more complex receiving hardware and there can be ambiguity problems in determining whether, for example, the signal has changed phase by +180° or -180°.
Suppose that the signal to be sent (called the modulating or message signal) is m(t).
The carrier onto which the signal is to be modulated is

Then the modulated signal is

This shows how m(t) modulates the phase. Clearly, it can also be viewed as a change of the frequency of the carrier signal. PM can thus be considered a special case of FM in which the carrier frequency modulation is given by the time derivative of the phase modulation.
The spectral behaviour of phase modulation is difficult to derive, but the mathematics reveals that there are two regions of particular interest:
,As with other modulation indices, this quantity indicates by how much the modulated variable varies around its unmodulated level. It relates to the variations in the phase of the carrier signal:
where Δθ is the peak phase deviation. Compare to the modulation index for frequency modulation.