Eye pattern

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Graphical eye pattern showing an example of two power levels in an OOK modulation scheme. Constant binary 1 and 0 levels are shown, as well as transitions from 0 to 1, 1 to 0, 0 to 1 to 0, and 1 to 0 to 1.

In telecommunication, an eye pattern, also known as an eye diagram, is an oscilloscope display in which a digital signal from a receiver is repetitively sampled and applied to the vertical input, while the data rate is used to trigger the horizontal sweep. It is so called because, for several types of coding, the pattern looks like a series of eyes between a pair of rails. It is an experimental tool for the evaluation of the combined effects of channel noise and intersymbol interference on the performance of a baseband pulse-transmission system. It is the synchronised superposition of all possible realisations of the signal of interest viewed within a particular signalling interval.

Several system performance measures can be derived by analyzing the display. If the signals are too long, too short, poorly synchronized with the system clock, too high, too low, too noisy, or too slow to change, or have too much undershoot or overshoot, this can be observed from the eye diagram. An open eye pattern corresponds to minimal signal distortion. Distortion of the signal waveform due to intersymbol interference and noise appears as closure of the eye pattern.[1][2][3]

Example

Measurements

There are many measurements that can be obtained from an Eye Diagram:[4]

Amplitude Measurements

  • Eye Amplitude
  • Eye Crossing Amplitude
  • Eye Crossing Percentage
  • Eye Height
  • Eye Level
  • Eye SNR
  • Quality Factor
  • Vertical Eye Opening

Time Measurements

  • Deterministic Jitter
  • Eye Crossing Time
  • Eye Delay
  • Eye Fall Time
  • Eye Rise Time
  • Eye Width
  • Horizontal Eye Opening
  • Peak-to-Peak Jitter
  • Random Jitter
  • RMS Jitter
  • CRC Jitter
  • Total Jitter

Interpreting Measurements

Eye-diagram feature What it measures
Eye opening (height, peak to peak) Additive noise in the signal
Eye overshoot/undershoot Peak distortion due to interruptions in the signal path
Eye width Timing synchronization & jitter effects
Eye closure Intersymbol interference, additive noise

See also

Notes

  1. Christopher M. Miller "High-Speed Digital Transmitter Characterization Using Eye Diagram Analysis". 1266 Hewlett-Packard Journal 45(1994) Aug., No,4, pp. 29-37.
  2.  This article incorporates public domain material from the General Services Administration document "Federal Standard 1037C" (in support of MIL-STD-188).
  3. John G Proakis, Digital Communications 3rd ed, 2001
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References

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External links