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Electrical noise is interfering and unwanted current or
voltages in an electrical device or system. Electrical noise, or more
simply noise, has a significant effect on the design and operation of
almost all electrical and optical systems which are used to communicate
or process information. Noise is responsible for the familiar static observed
on home radio receivers, the clicking sounds on frequency-modulation (FM)
radios operating in fringe (near-threshold) areas, and the "snow"-type
granularity on the picture tube of a television receiver displaying a
weak signal. In general, noise provides the fundamental limitation to
the range over which radio or optical signals can be transmitted and received
with integrity. Noise is, therefore, of great importance to engineers
who design and operate such systems.
It's convenient to differentiate between noise which results from human
activity and that which is naturally occurring. Noise which results from
human activity, such as that generated by an electrical appliance or an
automotive ignition, can usually be eliminated or minimized by good design
practice (shielding, filtering, equipment location, etc.). Naturally-occurring
noise can be further subdivided into that which is irregular or erratic
in nature and that which is more or less continuous.
An example of noise which is irregular or erratic is that associated
with an electrical storm. This type of noise is sometimes dealt with in
the system design, but since it's only occasionally present, it does
not ordinarily constitute a design limitation. On the other hand, naturally
occurring noise which is essentially continuous in time is responsible
for the fundamental limitation cited above. The remainder of the article
therefore concentrates on this type of noise.
Most noise generation is a consequence of the spontaneous fluctuations
which occur within matter at the microscopic level. In electrical circuits
these fluctuations give rise to what are commonly referred to as thermal
noise and shot noise. Thermal noise is generated by the random motion
of free electrons in a resistor or any conductor with resistance. The
random motion, and thus the noise generated, is proportional to the temperature
of the medium. At absolute zero temperature on the Kelvin scale (-459.67'F),
all motion ceases and no noise is generated. Shot noise is most commonly
identified with the fluctuations in the current of a vacuum tube caused
by the random emission of electrons from its heated cathode. Shot noise
is also observed in semiconductor devices as random fluctuations in carrier
density when an electric field is applied. There are other types of noise
associated with electrical circuits, but shot noise and thermal noise
are by far the most important.
In a system in which signals are transmitted through the atmosphere [for
example, amplitude-modulation (AM) or FM radio broadcast, or satellite
communications], the receiving system will always receive noise as well
as the desired signals. This noise is a result of thermal radiation from
the Earth, planets, Sun, Moon, the galaxy (galactic noise), radio-emitting
stars, and atmospheric gases. In addition, there is a small background
level of thermal radiation, uniformly distributed, which is believed associated
with the big bang origin of the universe. All of these noise sources,
weighted by the directional characteristics of the receiving antenna,
will contribute to the overall system noise.
In an optical communications system, a signal level is represented by
a number of energy packets called photons. The mean arrival rate of the
photons at the detector is proportional to the optical intensity or signal
strength. At the detector (a photodiode), the photons are absorbed, each
creating a hole-electron pair and thus a current in which the electrons
are randomly positioned in time and in which the mean number of electrons
is proportional to the optical intensity. The statistical nature of this
process gives rise to fluctuations in the number of photons representative
of a given level and, subsequently, the number of electrons generated
to represent that level. If the detector has internal gain as in an avalanche
photodiode, each hole-electron pair can create additional hole-electron
pairs. This process, however, is statistical in nature, resulting in a
mean value of gain but giving rise to additional fluctuations in the generated
current.
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