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Agilent
Vector Signal Analysis Basics
Application Note 150-15
Chapter 1
Vector Signal Analyzer

                                 This application note serves as a primer on the vector signal analyzer (VSA).
                                 This chapter discusses VSA measurement concepts and theory of operation;
                                 Chapter 2 discusses VSA vector-modulation analysis and, specifically,
                                 digital-modulation analysis.

                                 Analog, swept-tuned spectrum analyzers use superheterodyne technology
                                 to cover wide frequency ranges; from audio, through microwave, to millimeter
                                 frequencies. Fast Fourier transform (FFT) analyzers use digital signal
                                 processing (DSP) to provide high-resolution spectrum and network analysis,
                                 but are limited to low frequencies due to the limits of analog-to-digital
                                 conversion (ADC) and signal processing technologies. Today's wide-bandwidth,
                                 vector-modulated (also called complex or digitally modulated), time-varying
                                 signals benefit greatly from the capabilities of FFT analysis and other DSP
                                 techniques. VSAs combine superheterodyne technology with high speed
                                 ADCs and other DSP technologies to offer fast, high-resolution spectrum
                                 measurements, demodulation, and advanced time-domain analysis.
                                 A VSA is especially useful for characterizing complex signals such as
                                 burst, transient, or modulated signals used in communications, video,
                                 broadcast, sonar, and ultrasound imaging applications.

                                 Figure 1-1 shows a simplified block diagram of a VSA analyzer. The VSA
                                 implements a very different measurement approach than traditional
                                 swept analyzers; the analog IF section is replaced by a digital IF section
                                 incorporating FFT technology and digital signal processing. The traditional
                                 swept-tuned spectrum analyzer is an analog system; the VSA is fundamentally
                                 a digital system that uses digital data and mathematical algorithms to
                                 perform data analysis. For example, most traditional hardware functions,
                                 such as mixing, filtering, and demodulation, are accomplished digitally,
                                 as are many measurement operations. The FFT algorithm is used for
                                 spectrum analysis, and the demodulator algorithms are used for vector
                                 analysis applications.



                                        Analog data                        Digitized data stream


                                                          t                                        t
                                                                                                            FFT
                                                                                                                                           f
                          RF                                      ADC           LO          Time                         Frequency domain
                         input                                             90 degs
                                                                                                                               Q
                                               IF    Anti-alias                                            Demod-
                                                                                                           ulator                      I
                                             input     filter             Quadrature
                                                                            detector,
                                  Local                                 digital filtering                                Modulation domain
                                 oscilator
                                                                             Digital IF
                                                                                                                          I
                                                                                and
                                                                           DSP techniques                            t    Q
                                                                                                                              0 code 15
                                                                                                       Time domain            Code domain

                                 Figure 1-1. The vector signal analyzer digitizes the analog input signal and uses DSP technology
                                 to process and provide data outputs; the FFT algorithm produces frequency domain results,
                                 the demodulator algorithms produce modulation and code domain results




2
                                        A significant characteristic of the VSA is that it is designed to measure and
                                        manipulate complex data. In fact, it is called a vector signal analyzer because
                                        it has the ability to vector detect an input signal (measure the magnitude
                                        and phase of the input signal). You will learn about vector modulation and
                                        detection in Chapter 2. It is basically a measurement receiver with system
                                        architecture that is analogous to, but not identical to, a digital communications
                                        receiver. Though similar to an FFT analyzer, VSAs cover RF and microwave
                                        ranges, plus additional modulation-domain analysis capability. These
                                        advancements are made possible through digital technologies such as
                                        analog-to-digital conversion and DSP that include digital intermediate
                                        frequency (IF) techniques and fast Fourier transform (FFT) analysis.

                                        Because the signals that people must analyze are growing more complex, the
                                        latest generations of spectrum analyzers have moved to a digital architecture
                                        and often include many of the vector signal analysis capabilities previously
                                        found only in VSAs. Some analyzers digitize the signal at the instrument
                                        input, after some amplification, or after one or more downconverter stages.
                                        In any of these cases, phase as well as magnitude is preserved in order to
                                        perform true vector measurements. Capabilities are then determined by
                                        the digital signal processing capability inherent in the spectrum analyzer
                                        firmware or available as add-on software running either internally
                                        (measurement personalities) or externally (vector signal analysis software)
                                        on a computer connected to the analyzer.

                                        VSA measurement advantages
                                        Vector analysis measures dynamic signals and produces complex data results
                                        The VSA offers some distinct advantages over analog swept-tuned analysis.
                                        One of the major advantages of the VSA is its ability to better measure
                                        dynamic signals. Dynamic signals generally fall into one of two categories:
                                        time-varying or complex modulated. Time-varying are signals whose
                                        measured properties change during a measurement sweep (such as burst,
                                        gated, pulsed, or transient). Complex-modulated signals cannot be solely
                                        described in terms of simple AM, FM, or PM modulation, and include most
                                        of those used in digital communications, such as quadrature amplitude
                                        modulation (QAM).

                    Swept analysis                                                         Vector analysis

                                                                 Time domain            Fourier analysis          Frequency domain
                              Carrier
             A                                                      Time sampled data              A       Simulated parallel-filter processing
Frequency
resolution
                                                             0
bandwidth                                                                                   t
IF filter
                                                                                                                               Display shows full
                                                                                                                f1      f2     spectral display     f
                                                  f
                          Sweep span
       Start frequency                     Stop frequency               Time record                             Frequency spectrum


                                        Figure 1-2. Swept-tuned analysis displays the instantaneous time response of a narrowband IF filter
                                        to the input signal. Vector analysis uses FFT analysis to transform a set of time domain samples into
                                        frequency domain spectra.




                                                                                                                                                        3
                                                     A traditional swept-spectrum analyzer1, in effect, sweeps a narrowband
                                                     filter across a range of frequencies, sequentially measuring one frequency at
                                                     a time. Unfortunately, sweeping the input works well for stable or repetitive
                                                     signals, but will not accurately represent signals that change during the
                                                     sweep. Also, this technique only provides scalar (magnitude only) information,
                                                     though some other signal characteristics can be derived by further analysis
                                                     of spectrum measurements.

                                                     The VSA measurement process simulates a parallel bank of filters and
                                                     overcomes swept limitations by taking a "snapshot," or time-record, of the
                                                     signal; then processing all frequencies simultaneously. For example, if the
                                                     input is a transient signal, the entire signal event is captured (meaning all
                                                     aspects of the signal at that moment in time are digitized and captured);
                                                     then used by the FFT to compute the "instantaneous" complex spectra
                                                     versus frequency. This process can be performed in real-time, that is, without
                                                     missing any part of the input signal. For these reasons, the VSA is sometimes
                                                     referred to as a "dynamic signal analyzer" or a "real-time signal analyzer".
                                                     The VSA's ability to track a fast-changing signal isn't unlimited, however; it
                                                     depends on the VSA's computational capability.

                                                     The VSA decreases measurement time
                                                     Parallel processing yields another potential advantage for high-resolution
                                                     (narrow resolution bandwidth) measurements; faster measurement time.
                                                     If you've used a swept-tuned spectrum analyzer before, you already know
                                                     that narrow resolution bandwidth (RBW) measurements of small frequency
                                                     spans can be very time-consuming. Swept-tuned analyzers sweep frequencies
                                                     from point to point slowly enough to allow the analog resolution bandwidth
                                                     filters to settle. By contrast, the VSA measures across the entire frequency
                                                     span at one time. However, there is analogous VSA settling time due to the
                                                     digital filters and DSP. This means the VSA sweep speed is limited by data
                                                     collection and digital processing time rather than analog filters. But this
                                                     time is usually negligible when compared to the settling time of analog
                                                     filters. For certain narrow bandwidth measurements, the VSA can complete
                                                     a measurement up to 1000 times faster than conventional swept-tuned
                                                     analyzers.

                                                     In a swept-tuned spectrum analyzer, the physical bandwidth of the sweeping
                                                     filter limits the frequency resolution. The VSA doesn't have this limitation.
                                                     Some VSAs can resolve signals that are spaced less than 100 



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