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Spectrum of a baseband signal, energy E per unit frequency as a function of frequency f. The total energy is the area under the curve.

Jan 17, 2020 In this tutorial, we are going to show you how to fix Samsung Galaxy unknown baseband version. This guide applies to all Samsung Galaxy variants. One of our loyal visitors had left a request pertaining to a problem which she was facing on your Samsung Galaxy S4: She states, ” My Samsung Galaxy S4 baseband version is Unknown. Baseband signal. A baseband signal or lowpass signal is a signal that can include frequencies that are very near zero, by comparison with its highest frequency (for example, a sound waveform can be considered as a baseband signal, whereas a radio signal or any other modulated signal is not). If you are familiar with DIY electronics repairs and do not mind destroying your iPhone, you can refer to the rough guide below on how to replace your baseband chip pre-programmed with baseband 5.13.04 (or lower) which can be unlocked using ultrasn0w 1.2.

Baseband is a signal that has a near-zero frequency range, i.e. a spectral magnitude that is nonzero only for frequencies in the vicinity of the origin (termed f = 0) and negligible elsewhere.[1] In telecommunications and signal processing, baseband signals are transmitted without modulation, that is, without any shift in the range of frequencies of the signal.[2] Baseband has a low-frequency—contained within the bandwidth frequency close to 0 hertz up to a higher cut-off frequency. Baseband can be synonymous with lowpass or non-modulated, and is differentiated from passband, bandpass, carrier-modulated, intermediate frequency, or radio frequency (RF).

Various uses[edit]

Baseband signal[edit]

A baseband signal or lowpass signal is a signal that can include frequencies that are very near zero, by comparison with its highest frequency (for example, a sound waveform can be considered as a baseband signal, whereas a radio signal or any other modulated signal is not).[3]

A baseband bandwidth is equal to the highest frequency of a signal or system, or an upper bound on such frequencies,[4] for example the upper cut-off frequency of a low-pass filter. By contrast, passband bandwidth is the difference between a highest frequency and a nonzero lowest frequency.

Baseband channel[edit]

A baseband channel or lowpass channel (or system, or network) is a communication channel that can transfer frequencies that are very near zero.[5] Examples are serial cables and local area networks (LANs), as opposed to passband channels such as radio frequency channels and passband filtered wires of the analog telephone network. Frequency division multiplexing (FDM) allows an analog telephone wire to carry a baseband telephone call, concurrently as one or several carrier-modulated telephone calls.

Digital baseband transmission[edit]

Digital baseband transmission, also known as line coding,[6] aims at transferring a digital bit stream over baseband channel, typically an unfiltered wire, contrary to passband transmission, also known as carrier-modulated transmission.[7] Passband transmission makes communication possible over a bandpass filtered channel, such as the telephone network local-loop or a band-limited wireless channel.[citation needed]

Baseband transmission in Ethernet[edit]

The word 'BASE' in Ethernet physical layer standards, for example 10BASE5, 100BASE-TX and 1000BASE-SX, implies baseband digital transmission (i.e. that a line code and an unfiltered wire are used).[8][9]

Baseband processor[edit]

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A baseband processor also known as BP or BBP is used to process the down-converted digital signal to retrieve essential data for the wireless digital system. The baseband processing block in GNSS receivers is usually responsible for providing observable data: code pseudo-ranges and carrier phase measurements, as well as navigation data.[citation needed]

Equivalent baseband signal[edit]

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An equivalent baseband signal or equivalent lowpass signal is—in analog and digital modulation methods for (band-pass) signals with constant or varying carrier frequency (for example ASK, PSKQAM, and FSK)—a complex valued representation of the modulated physical signal (the so-called passband signal or RF signal). The equivalent baseband signal is Z(t)=I(t)+jQ(t){displaystyle Z(t)=I(t)+jQ(t),} where I(t){displaystyle I(t)} is the inphase signal, Q(t){displaystyle Q(t)} the quadrature phase signal, and j{displaystyle j} the imaginary unit. In a digital modulation method, the I(t){displaystyle I(t)} and Q(t){displaystyle Q(t)} signals of each modulation symbol are evident from the constellation diagram. The frequency spectrum of this signal includes negative as well as positive frequencies. The physical passband signal corresponds to

I(t)cos(ωt)Q(t)sin(ωt)=Re{Z(t)ejωt}{displaystyle I(t)cos(omega t)-Q(t)sin(omega t)=mathrm {Re} {Z(t)e^{jomega t}},}

where ω{displaystyle omega } is the carrier angular frequency in rad/s.[10]

Modulation[edit]

A signal at baseband is often used to modulate a higher frequency carrier signal in order that it may be transmitted via radio. Modulation results in shifting the signal up to much higher frequencies (radio frequencies, or RF) than it originally spanned. A key consequence of the usual double-sidebandamplitude modulation (AM) is that the range of frequencies the signal spans (its spectral bandwidth) is doubled. Thus, the RF bandwidth of a signal (measured from the lowest frequency as opposed to 0 Hz) is twice its baseband bandwidth. Steps may be taken to reduce this effect, such as single-sideband modulation. Some transmission schemes such as frequency modulation use even more bandwidth.

The figure shows what happens with AM modulation:

Comparison of the equivalent baseband version of a signal and its AM-modulated (double-sideband) RF version, showing the typical doubling of the occupied bandwidth.

See also[edit]

Look up baseband in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

References[edit]

  1. ^Leon W. Couch II (1993). Digital and Analog Communication Systems. Prentice Hall.
  2. ^B.P. Lathi (1983). Modern Digital and Analog Communication Systems. Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
  3. ^Steven Alan Tretter (1995). Communication System Design Using Dsp Algorithms: With Laboratory Experiments for the TMS320C30. Springer. ISBN0-306-45032-1.
  4. ^Mischa Schwartz (1970). Information, Transmission, Modulation and Noise: A Unified Approach to Communication Systems. McGraw-Hill.
  5. ^Chris C. Bissell and David A. Chapman (1992). Digital Signal Transmission. Cambridge University Press. ISBN0-521-42557-3.
  6. ^Mikael Gustavsson and J. Jacob Wikner (2000). CMOS Data Converters for Communications. Springer. ISBN0-7923-7780-X.
  7. ^Jan W. M. Bergmans (1996). Digital Baseband Transmission and Recording. Springer. ISBN0-7923-9775-4.
  8. ^IEEE 802.3 1.2.3 Physical layer and media notation
  9. ^'IEEE Get Program'. standards.ieee.org. IEEE. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
  10. ^Proakis, John G. Digital Communications, 4th edition. McGraw-Hill, 2001. p150
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Baseband&oldid=941607165'


Baseband is commonly known as BB, Baseband can be defined as a communication module. It contains a communication system. It is usually used to control iPhone’s communication procedures, telephone communications, WiFi wireless communications, as well as Bluetooth communications.


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Warm Prompt:


iPhone's signal is directly related to its baseband. Under normal circumstances, if you upgrade the firmware of your iDevice, it’s baseband will follow the upgrade. So please be careful when you flash/ restore/ upgrade your iDevice with carrier lock, because it can not be unlocked if you upgrade iDevice’s baseband.

There are some online methods for you to restore/ upgrade firmware, but only for specific iDevices and specific systems, you need to check clearly before your operation.

Once the baseband is upgraded, it is difficult to downgrade it. At present, only part of the iPhone 3GS can be downgraded from 06.15 to 05.13.04.

How to check iPhone’s baseband?

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A. Download and install the latest 3uTool on your PC. Connect iPhone to PC using the USB cable. As shown below, 3uTools will show all your iPhone’s basic information.



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B1. Launch Settings app of your iPhone -> click General.


B2. Continue to click About -> Modern Firmware.

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