John Wiley & Sons Direct Digital Frequency Synthesizers Cover With the advent of integrated circuits (IC), digital systems havebecome widely used in modern electr.. Product #: 978-0-7803-3438-0 Regular price: $167.29 $167.29 Auf Lager

Direct Digital Frequency Synthesizers

Kroupa, Venceslav F. (Herausgeber)

Cover

1. Auflage November 1998
400 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-0-7803-3438-0
John Wiley & Sons

With the advent of integrated circuits (IC), digital systems havebecome widely used in modern electronic devices, includingcommunications and measurement equipment. Direct Digital FrequencySynthesizers (DDS) are used in communications as transmitterexciters and local oscillators in receivers. The advantages aresuperior frequency stability, the same as that of the driving clockoscillator, and short switching times. The difficulties are loweroutput frequencies and rather large spurious signals.

Compiled for practicing engineers who do not have theprerequisite of a specialist's knowledge in Direct DigitalFrequency Synthesizers (DDS), this collection of 40 importantreprinted papers and 9 never-before published contributionspresents a comprehensive introduction to DDS properties and a clearunderstanding of actual devices. The information in this volume canlead to easier computer simulations and improved designs.

Featured topics include:

* Discussion of principles and state of the art of wide-rangeDDS

* Investigation of spurious signals in DDS

* Combination of DDS with Phase Lock Loops (PLL)

* Examination of phase and background 'noise' in DDS

* Introduction to Digital to Analog Conversion (DAC)

* Analysis of mathematics of quasiperiodic omission ofpulses

DDFS can also serve as a textbook for students seeking essentialbackground theory.

Venceslav F. Kroupa has been affiliated with the Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics of the Academy of Sciences in the Czech Republic since 1955. He has previously written four books and has published over 100 papers on the subjects of standard time and frequency; frequency stability and noise; frequency synthesis; and precise frequency measurement. Dr. Kroupa holds 15 patents and has received awards from the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences in 1969 and 1974. He is a member of IEEE Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control Society.

V. F. Kroupa, The Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic