Abstract

High-order modulated signals have lower anti-interference ability than low-order modulated signals with the same modulation method and conditions. In situations with low signal-to-noise ratios, the quality of high-order signals can degrade significantly. An algorithm capable of intelligently switching the modulation order based on the current signal-to-noise ratio can effectively address this issue. This paper presents an adaptive signal transmission algorithm that intelligently selects different orders of Phase shift keying (PSK) modulation depending on varying signal noise ratio (SNR) conditions, while ensuring the user-specified upper limit of bit error rate (BER). This approach guarantees signal transmission quality. The algorithm is implemented in Python and involves simulating the relationship curve between SNR and BER for different PSK orders. This simulation is combined with theoretical transmission rate analysis, resulting in an adaptive algorithm that intelligently switches modulation methods under complex conditions to meet transmission requirements. The proposed algorithm dynamically adapts to diverse user requirements for signal-to-noise ratios in various environments. It achieves this by adjusting the modulation order, calculating theoretical transmission times based on the given signal frequency, and ultimately verifying the actual bit error rate through transmission and testing. Upon testing, this design successfully achieved its intended goals.

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