Data Communication (ch3)
transmission
communication of data by propagation and processing of signals
DC component
component of zero frequency
types of impairments
attenuation, delay distortion
full duplex
both directions at the same time. both transmit simultaneously. e.g., telephone
analog
continuous values within some interval
bandwidth of the signal
cycles per second or Hertz
analog and digital signals
data propagated by means of electromagnetic signals Analog: - continuously variable electromagnetic wave - various media (wire, fibre optic, space) - speech bandwidth 100Hz to 7kHz - telephone bandwidth 300Hz to 3400Hz - video bandwidth 4MHz Digital: - sequence of voltage pulses. Use two DC components
digital
discrete values
wavelength
distance occupied by one cycle OR distance between two points of corresponding phase in two consecutive cycles
half duplex
either direction, but only one way at a time. both stations may transmit, but one at a time. e.g., police radio
signals
electric or electromagnetic representations of data
data
entities that convey meaning or information
Channel Capacity in Nyquist Theorem (noiseless channel)
essentially, double the bandwidth: C = 2Blog2M
medium
guided medium e.g., twisted pair, coaxial cables, optical fiber unguided medium or wireless e.g., air, water, vacuum
data rate & bandwidth
- any transmission system has a limited band of frequencies - this limits the data rate that can be carried - higher data rate means higher bandwidth and vice versa
three causes of impairments
- attenuation - delay distortion - noise
noise definition
addition signals inserted between transmitter and receiver
crosstalk
- a signal from one line is picked up by another - it can occur by electrical coupling between nearby twisted paris or, rarely, coax cables carrying multiple signals
analog transmission
- analog signal transmitted without regard to content - signals may represent analog or digital data - attenuated over distance - use amplifiers to boost signal - also amplifies noise
notes about signals
- change in a short span of time means high frequency - change over a long span of time means low frequency - if a signal does not change at all, its frequency is zero - if a signal changes instantaneously, its frequency is infinite - phase describes the position of the waveform relative to time 0
advantages & disadvantages of digital signal
- cheaper than analog - less susceptible to noise interference - greater attenuation - pulses become rounded and smaller - leads to loss of information
digital transmission
- concerned with content - integrity endangered by noise, attenuation, etc - repeaters used for greater distance - repeater - receives digital signal - extracts bit pattern - retransmits - attenuation is overcame - noise is not amplified
attenuation in detail
- depends on medium -> un/guided - more complex in unguided medium - measure in decibels/unit distance - received signal strength - must be enough to be detected - must be sufficiently higher than noise to be received without error - attenuation is an increasing function of frequency
advantages of digital transmission
- digital technology - LSI/VLSI -> low cost and size of circuits - data integrity - repeaters rather than amplifiers -> longer distances over lower quality lines - capacity utilization - high bandwidth links economical - high degree of multiplexing easier with digital techniques - security & privacy - encryption - integration - can treat analog and digital data similarly
point-to-point
- direct link - only 2 devices share the link
thermal noise(white noise)
- due to moving of electrons in a conductor - uniformly distributed across the frequency spectrum - it's function of temperature - can not be eliminated and therefore put an upper bound on communications system performance
Channel Capacity in Shannon Capacity (Noisy Channel)
- faster data rate shortens each bit so burst of noise affects more bits - at given noise level, high data rate means higher error rate - consider white noise only: SNRdb = 10 log10(signal/noise) Capacity C = B log2(1+SNR) - this is an error free capacity
impulse noise
- irregular pulses or spikes - e.g. electromagnetic disturbances, such as lightening - short duration with relatively high amplitude
channel capacity definition
- max possible data rate on communication channel
direct link
- no intermediate devices - signal strength using repeaters or amplifiers - this term can be applied to un/guided signals
delay distortion
- occurs only in guided media - because propagation velocity varies with frequency - for band limited signal, the velocity tends to be higher near the centre frequency and fall off toward the two edges of the band - a phase shift between different frequencies because, various frequency components arrive at different times
effective bandwidth
- often just bandwidth - narrow band of frequencies containing most of the energy
frequency domain concepts
- signal usually made up of many frequencies - any signal is made up of components at various frequencies, each is a sine wave - can be shown (Fourier analysis) that any signal is made up of component sine waves - can plot frequency domain functions
noise types
- thermal noise(white noise) - intermodulation noise - crosstalk - impulse noise
Decibel definition
A measure of the ration between two different power levels
data rate
Bits per second (bps)
attenuation definition
loss of a signal strength over long distance
peak amplitutde
maximum value or strength f signal over time measured in volts
multi-point
more than two devices share the link
simplex
one direction. one station transmit and the other receive. e.g., television
spectrum
range of frequencies contained in signal
frequency
rate of change of signal repeats; or the number of periods in one second - Hertz (Hz) or cycles per second period = time required for one repetition (T), T = 1 / f
digital data
refers to information that has discrete states. it takes on discrete values
analog data
refers to information that is continuous. it takes on continuous values
phase
relative position in time within a single period of a signal
sine wave function
s(t) = A sin(2 pi f t + phase)
intermodulation
signals that are the sum and difference of original frequencies sharing a medium
sine wave
simple and composite sine wave represented by three parameters: - Peak Amplitude (A) - Frequency (f) - Phase (/0)
direct relationship between data rate and bandwidth
the greater the bandwidth of a transmission system, the higher is the data rate that can be transmitted
data transmission successful factors
the quality of signal being transmitted the characteristic of the transmission medium
Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR)
the ratio of the power in a signal to the power contained in the noise. this expresses the amount, in decibels, that the signal exceeds the noise level - high S/N ratio means high quality signal - therefore, less repeaters
forms of noise
thermal noise, inter-modulation, cross talk, impulse noise
codec
translate analog signals into digital signals
absolute bandwidth
width of spectrum