(Redirected from Audio frequency-shift keying)

An example of binary FSK
'Frequency-shift keying (FSK)' is a form of
frequency modulation in which the modulating
signal shifts the
output frequency between predetermined values.
Usually, the instantaneous frequency is shifted between two discrete values termed the mark frequency and the space frequency.
Continuous phase forms of FSK exist in which there is no
phase discontinuity in the modulated signal. The example shown at right is of such a form.
Other names for FSK are ''frequency-shift modulation'' and ''frequency-shift
signaling''.
'Minimum frequency-shift keying' or '
minimum-shift keying' (MSK) is a particularly spectrally efficient form of coherent frequency-shift keying. In MSK the difference between the higher and lower frequency is identical to half the bit rate. As a result, the waveforms used to represent a 0 and a 1 bit differ by exactly half a carrier period. This is the smallest FSK
modulation index that can be chosen such that the waveforms for 0 and 1 are
orthogonal. A variant of MSK called
GMSK is used in the
GSM mobile phone standard.
FSK is commonly used in
Caller ID and
remote metering applications: see
FSK standards for use in Caller ID and remote metering for more details.
Mark frequency is the frequency used to represent binary 1 and the space frequency is used to represent binary 0.
'Audio frequency-shift keying' (AFSK) is a
modulation technique by which
digital data is represented as changes in the
frequency (
pitch) of an
audio tone, yielding an encoded signal suitable for transmission via
radio or
telephone. Normally, the transmitted audio alternates between two tones: one, the "mark", represents a
binary one; the other, the "space", represents a binary zero.
AFSK differs from regular
frequency-shift keying in that the modulation is performed at
baseband frequencies. In radio applications, the AFSK-modulated signal is normally used to modulate an
RF carrier (using a conventional technique, such as
AM FM or
ACSSB(R)(LM Mode(R)) for transmission.
AFSK is not generally used for high-speed data communications, as it is much less efficient in both power and bandwidth than most other modulation modes. In addition to its simplicity, however, AFSK has the advantage that encoded signals will pass through
AC-coupled links, including most equipment originally designed to carry music or speech.
Applications
Most early telephone-line
modems used audio frequency-shift keying to send and receive data, up to rates of about 300 bits per second. The common
Bell 103 modem used this technique, for example. Some early
microcomputers used a specific form of AFSK modulation, the
Kansas City standard, to store data on
audio cassettes. AFSK is still widely used in
amateur radio, as it allows data transmission through unmodified voiceband equipment.
Radio control gear uses FSK, but calls it
FM and
PPM instead.
AFSK is also used in the
United States'
Emergency Alert System to transmit warning information. It is used at higher
bitrates for
Weathercopy used on
Weatheradio by
NOAA in the U.S., and more extensively by
Environment Canada.
The
CHU shortwave radio station in
Ottawa,
Canada broadcasts an Exclusive digital time signal encoded using AFSK modulation.
See also
★
Amplitude-shift keying
★
Multiple frequency-shift keying (MFSK)
★
Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing
★
Phase-shift keying
★
Dual-tone multi-frequency (DTMF) is another encoding technique which represents data using pairs of audio frequencies.
References
★
Federal Standard 1037C
★
MIL-STD-188