Resumen
This paper presents a method for reconstruction of a personal computer (PC) display image from common-mode noises coupling with monitor signals on a PC power cable. While the signal cable, which connects the PC and the monitor, is usually near the user, the power cable is connected to the outside electrical network of the office or the building. Thus, the power cables may become dominant gateways and/or antennas for emission and conduction of the common-mode noise, which may lead to a serious security issue. The measured common-mode was found to include both the monitor signal and undesired beats, which were caused by step responses of the signal and conceal the meaningful information. The original monitor signal was then calculated by excluding the beats, which could be measured by using standard up-step and down-step responses, from the measured common-mode noise and using an inverse function of the noise current level. The experimental results show that the beats were removed almost completely from the noise waveform for a monochromatic image. Alphabetic character strings, each of which were composed of, at most, 9 × 9 dots, were confirmed to be reconstructed clearly both in the monitor resolutions of 800 × 600 pixels and 1280 × 1024 pixels from the common-mode noise.