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Let X1, X2, and X3 be independent and identically distributed random variables with uniform distribute on [0, 1]. The probability P(X1+X2 < X3) is ____

  Solution Let S = X 1 + X 2 . Since X 3 is independent of S, P(X 1 + X 2 < X 3 ) = E[P(X 3 > S | S)]. Because X 3 ~ U(0, 1), P(X 3 > S) = 1 − S,  for 0 ≤ S ≤ 1 0,  for S > 1 The sum S = X 1 + X 2 has the triangular density f S (s) = s,  for 0 ≤ s ≤ 1 f S (s) = 2 − s,  for 1 ≤ s ≤ 2 Hence, P(X 1 + X 2 < X 3 ) = ∫ 0 1 (1 − s)s ds = ∫ 0 1 (s − s²) ds = [s²/2 − s³/3] 0 1 = 1/2 − 1/3 = 1/6 . Final Answer P(X 1 + X 2 < X 3 ) = 1/6

IF Trade-off Simulator (Superheterodyne Receiver)

IF Choice Trade-off Simulator IF Trade-off Simulator Adjust the Intermediate Frequency (IF) to see how it affects Selectivity, Image Rejection, and Tracking (based on MCQ 61). Signal Frequency ($f_s$): 1000 kHz Intermediate Frequency ($f_{IF}$): 455 kHz Image Frequency ($f_i = f_s + 2f_{IF}$) 1910 kHz Image Separation 910 kHz Q-Factor (Stability) 2.2 Analysis based on your MCQ: Online Signal Processing Simulations Main Page >

OFDM vs. DFT-s-OFDM Simulator

PAPR Simulator: OFDM vs. DFT-s-OFDM OFDM vs. DFT-s-OFDM Simulator Analyze Peak-to-Average Power Ratio (PAPR) for 5G/LTE Uplink Design Modulation Order (M-QAM) 4-QAM (QPSK) 16-QAM 64-QAM 256-QAM Subcarriers (N) 64 carriers Symbol Smoothing Over-sample (4x) Run Simulation Why the difference? In OFDM , symbols are independent on each carrier. Summing them causes random spikes. In DFT-s-OFDM , the DFT "spreads" each data symbol across all carriers, acting like a single-carrier signal. ...

Reed-Solomon Interactive Simulator

Reed-Solomon RS(7,3) Interactive Simulator Reed–Solomon Interactive Simulator GF(2³) Engine | RS(7,3) Code | 2-Symbol Error Correction 1. Source Bitstream (Input 9 bits) Reset Channel Each 3 bits form 1 symbol in GF(2³). Total 3 data symbols. 2. Wireless Channel (Flip bits to test correction) Click any bit below to simulate noise in the air. STATUS: Clean Signal Errors: 0 symbols 3. Mathematical Decoder Syndromes ($S_1 \dots S_4$): 0, 0, 0, 0 Detected Error Positions: None 4. Recovered Data 101011000 ✓ Ma...

Spectral Efficiency Simulation for various Modulation Schemes

Spectral Efficiency Lab Determine if your channel bandwidth supports your chosen modulation scheme. Bit Rate ($R_b$) in kbps Modulation Scheme BPSK / ASK (Binary) QPSK / 4-QAM (M=4) 8-PSK (M=8) 16-QAM (M=16) 64-QAM (M=64) Use Nyquist Min. BW ($B = R_s$) Default: Null-to-Null BW ($B = 2R_s$) Current Efficiency (η): 0.5 b/s/Hz Required Bandwidth for this setup: 20.00 kHz Signal Processing Knowledge Check Which modulation technique is most susceptible to power-line noi...

BPSK vs BFSK: Understanding the 3dB Power Gain (with Simulation)

Why BPSK is 3dB Better Than BFSK? In digital communications, we are always fighting noise. The goal is to send bits (0 and 1) using the least amount of energy possible. If you compare **Binary Phase Shift Keying (BPSK)** and **Binary Frequency Shift Keying (BFSK)**, BPSK is the clear winner. Here is the mathematical "why." 1. BPSK (Antipodal) BPSK uses a single carrier but flips the phase. The symbols are "opposites." $d_{BPSK} = 2\sqrt{E_b}$ Distance is the full diameter of the circle. 2. BFSK (Orthogonal) BFSK uses two different frequencies. These act like two perpendicular dimensions. ...

BPSK vs MSK vs GMSK Simulation | Compare Spectra and Waveforms

Rigorous MSK/GMSK Visualizer BPSK vs MSK vs GMSK Simulation Bits: Mode: BPSK MSK GMSK BT: Amp Saturation: Simulate Phase Trajectory (Degrees) RF Waveform Spectrum (dB) Technical Analysis: Baseband to Passband Pipeline This simulator treats MSK and GMSK as Continuous Phase Modulation (CPM) systems, where information is encoded in the accumulation of phase rather than absolute state jumps. 1. The Pulse Shaping (NRZ to Frequency) Digital bits are mapped to NRZ (+1/-1) . In MSK/GMSK, these are treated as Frequency Commands . In GMSK, these pulses are convolved with a Gaussian filter: h(t) = (1/&sqrt;2πσT) exp(-t 2 /2σ 2 T 2 ) 2. Phase Accumulation (The Integral) The phase φ(t) is the integral of the shaped frequency pulses. For Minimum Shift Keying, the modulation index is exactly 0.5, ensuring a 90° shift per bit. BPSK Phase jumps instantly between 0 ...

Why Did GSM Use GMSK Instead of BPSK? Understanding the Engineering Behind 2G Networks

Why Did GSM Use GMSK Instead of BPSK? Understanding the Engineering Behind 2G Networks One of the most common questions in digital communication is: Why did GSM choose GMSK modulation instead of BPSK? At first glance, both Binary Phase Shift Keying (BPSK) and Minimum Shift Keying (MSK) appear to have constant-amplitude RF waveforms. So why did engineers developing second-generation (2G) GSM networks select Gaussian Minimum Shift Keying (GMSK) as the standard modulation technique? The answer lies in spectral efficiency, phase continuity, amplifier performance, and battery life . In this article, we'll explore the technical reasons behind GSM's choice of GMSK and compare it with BPSK. What Is BPSK Modulation? Binary Phase Shift Keying (BPSK) is one of the simplest digital modulation schemes. The transmitted passband signal is represented as: s(t) = A cos(2Ï€f₍c₎t + φ(t)) Where: A is the carrier amplitude f c is the carrier frequency φ(t) take...

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