By Ya Bao Wireless Communications and Advanced Networks Wireless Techniques Cellular systems High-speed networks.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 2: Digital Modulation
Advertisements

SIMS-201 The Telephone System Wired and Wireless.
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION TO WIRELESS COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
By Ya Bao Wireless Communications and Advanced Networks Wireless Techniques Cellular systems High-speed networks.
Wireless Multimedia Delivery over 3G Networks Greg Leah C SC 461.
Communications Systems ASU Course EEE455/591 Instructor: Joseph Hui Monarch Institute of Engineering.
Mobile Phones Done By : 1.Saed Fathi 1998 / Ramy Ghaboun 2002 / Abd Al_Rhman Tabeel 2001 / 0306 Supervision : Dr.eng. Basil Hammad.
Tutorial 8 Mohamed Esam Mobile Communications Omni Cell planning Sectorization Sectorization
Wireless Network Taxonomy Wireless communication includes a wide range of network types and sizes. Government regulations that make specific ranges of.
Network Technology CSE3020 Week 12
CSIS 6251 CSIS 625 Week 14 Wireless Technologies Cell Phones, LMDS, MMDS, etc. Copyright Dan Oelke For use by students of CSIS 625 for purposes.
Computers Are Your Future © 2006 Prentice-Hall, Inc.
Overview.  UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunication System) the third generation mobile communication systems.
1 Pertemuan 5 Networking Fundamentals Matakuliah: M0284/Teknologi & Infrastruktur E-Business Tahun: 2005 Versi: >
GSM Security Overview (Part 1)
EELE 5490 Fall 2009 EELE 5490, Fall, 2009 Wireless Communications Ali S. Afana Department of Electrical Engineering Class 1 Sep. 30 th, 2009.
Ceng 764 Wireless Communications & Networks
1 Adapted from Wireless Communications Principles & Practice By Theodore S. Rappaport, 2nd ed. Prentice Hall, 2002.
Introduction to Wireless Communication. History of wireless communication Guglielmo Marconi invented the wireless telegraph in 1896 Communication by encoding.
Introduction Chapter 1. Wireless Comes of Age Guglielmo Marconi invented the wireless telegraph in 1896 Communication by encoding alphanumeric characters.
Preliminary 陳仁暉 副教授 Tel: (03) Ext 5990.
Introduction to Wireless Communication Systems These slides contains copyrighted materials from Prentice Hall Inc., obtained as instructor resources, and.
Evolution of Wireless Communication
AJIS (c) AJIS LLC, 2009Jonathan Wells, AJIS LLC 1 Introduction to Cellular Technology Jonathan Wells PhD MBA President, AJIS LLC.
Copyright © 2011, Dr. Dharma P. Agrawal and Dr. Qing-An Zeng. All rights reserved 1 Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION.
1 Cellular communications Cellular communications BASIC TELECOMMUNICATIONS.
16.1 Chapter 16 Wireless WANs: Cellular Telephone and Satellite Networks Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction.
Chi-Cheng Lin, Winona State University CS412 Introduction to Computer Networking & Telecommunication DSL, Cable, and Mobile Telephone System.
COSC Wireless Networks Bala Kalyanasundaram.
Mobile Phone Networks Dr. Hassan Nojumi1 MOBLIE PHONE NETWORKS Dr. Hassan Nojumi.
Wireless Communication Instructor: Jin Wang Department of Electrical & Electronics Engineering
GSM: The European Standard for Mobile Telephony Presented by Rattan Muradia Requirement for course CSI 5171 Presented by Rattan Muradia Requirement for.
Introduction to Communication Systems
Wireless Communications. Outline Introduction History System Overview Signals and Propagation Noise and Fading Modulation Multiple Access Design of Cellular.
Fu-Jen Catholic University Page 1 Department of Electronic Engineering 2015/9/15 Ch0: INTRODUCTION 0.1 Mobile communications 1st generation: analog voice.
Stallings, Wireless Communications & Networks, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Introduction Chapter 1.
Mobile and Wireless Communication Technologies & Techniques
BY NEHA CHOUDHARY ASST. PROFFESSOR DEPT. OF CSE/IT LHST-A.
By Ya Bao Wireless Communications 1). Wireless Communication Technology 2). Cellular System Design Fundamental.
+ 1.1 History and Background - Voice/ Telephony Services FM technology - Mobile Telephone Service (MTS) Introduced in 1946, it allowed telephone calls.
4G Mobile Communications. MOBILE SYSTEM GENERATION First Generation (1G) Mobile System:  The introduction of cellular systems in the late 1970s and early.
Mobile Computing Cellular Concepts. Cellular Networks Wireless Transmission Cellular Concept Frequency Reuse Channel Allocation Call Setup Cell Handoffs.
The Physical Layer Chapter 2 – Part 2 Ch The Local Loop: Modems, ADSL, and Wireless The use of both analog and digital transmissions for a computer.
Cellular Communication SNSCE - CS2402 Mobile Pervasive Computing.
Wireless Telecommunications Networks personal area network (PAN) A wireless telecommunications network for device-to-device connections within a very short.
Ch 16. Wireless WANs Cellular Telephony Designed to provide communication between two “moving” units – To track moving units (mobile station; MS),
Wireless WANs: Cellular Telephone and Satellite Networks
Chapter 16 Other Wireless Networks Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
IT 1403 MOBILE COMPUTING. SYLLABUS UNIT I WIRELESS COMMUNICATION FUNDAMENTALS Introduction – Wireless transmission - Frequencies for radio transmission.
Presented by: Gurpreet Singh Assistant Professor Department of School of Computing and Engineering Galgotias University Cellular Communication.
Computers Are Your Future © 2008 Prentice-Hall, Inc.
Telephone and Telecommunication. Telephone - a device for transmitting and receiving sound at a distance. Modern phones are performed through the transmission.
Wireless Communications Outline Introduction History System Overview Signals and Propagation Noise and Fading Modulation Multiple Access Design of Cellular.
WHY WIRELESS COMMUNICATION?  Freedom from wires.  No bunch of wires running from here and there.  “Auto Magical” instantaneous communication without.
Polytechnic University  M. Veeraraghavan 1 State-of-the-art in commercial wireless communications Prof. Malathi Veeraraghavan Elec. & Comp. Engg. Dept/CATT.
Mobile Communications: Introduction WIRELESS MOBILE DEVICES performance Pager receive only tiny displays simple text messages Mobile phones voice, data.
Cellular Networks 1. Overview 1G Analog Cellular 2G TDMA - GSM 2G CDMA - IS G 3G 4G and Beyond Cellular Engineering Issues 2.
Wireless & Mobile Networks By Dr. Ali Maqousi Feb, 2012.
Lecture 02 EEE 441: Wireless And Mobile Communications BRAC University.
Lecture 01 EEE 441: Wireless And Mobile Communications BRAC University.
A PRESENTATION ON VOCATIONAL TRAINING IN BSNL. 2 3-Jul-16 GSM (Global System For Mobile Communication) The Global System for Mobile communications (GSM:
Wireless Communications
Cellular Networks Part 2
Wireless local loop Technologies
Cellular Networks Wireless Transmission Cellular Concept
Wireless Networks (CNET - 333)
WIRELESS COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
Introduction to Wireless Communications
WIRELESS AND MOBILE COMMUNICATION
Presentation transcript:

by Ya Bao Wireless Communications and Advanced Networks Wireless Techniques Cellular systems High-speed networks Advanced digital networks Ya Bao Sandra Dudley-Mcevoy Assessment: 3-hour written examination – 80% Lab report – 20%

Reading list Core reading Theodore S. Rappaport, “Wireless communications: principles & Practice” 2nd Ed, Prentice Hall, E-book available via Perry library site 33%2C174%2CB/frameset&FF=twireless+comm unications+principles+and+practice&1%2C1%2C Background reading: 1.Bruce A. Black, “Introduction to Wireless Systems”, Prentice Hall, 2008, 2.William Stallings, “Wireless Communications and Networks” 2 nd Ed, Prentice-Hall, 2005 by Ya Bao

3 Wireless Communications 1). Wireless Communication Technology Antenna and propagation models Wireless access technologies 2). Cellular System Design Fundamental * Fundamentals of cellular system design GSM, GPRS,UMTS, LET

by Ya Bao Introduction to wireless communication systems First demonstration in a room in 1896 by G. Marconi. 12 miles in 1897 and across the English Channel (21 miles) in in 1901 Marconi sends the first signal across an ocean. Early Mobile Telephone System Architecture (after WWII) powerful transmitter Single central antenna and coverage (radius 50km) High power consumption of mobile station Very limited capacity

by Ya Bao

6 Wireless Communication Systems Radio and TV Paging Systems Cordless Telephone Systems Cellular Telephone Systems (GSM, 3G) * Satellite Communication Systems Globe Position Systems (GPS) Wireless LAN (WLAN) New wireless technologies (WiMax, Bluetooth, 4G)

by Ya Bao Mobile Radio Systems Around the World Many mobile radio standards have been developed for wireless systems. Some of the most common paging, cordless and cellular standards of the world are as below. Paging: The worlds most common paging system is the Post Office Code Standards Advisory Group (POCSAG). This was developed by British Post Office. It supports binary frequency shift keying (FSK) signaling at 512 bps, 1200 bps and 2400bps. The new paging system FLEX and ERMES provides up to 6400bps transmission by using 4-level modulation.

by Ya Bao Cordless: CT2 and Digital European Cordless Telephone (DECT) are the most popular cordless telephone standards throughout Europe and Asia CT2 systems makes use of microcells, which covers small distance using base stations with antenna mounted. This system uses FSK along with 32 kbps adaptive differential pulse code modulation (ADPCM). DECT system accommodates data and voice system for office and business users

by Ya Bao Cellular: The world first cellular system was implemented by the Nippon Telephone and Telegraph company (NTT) in Japan. The cellular standards for each of the countries is as follows: U.S: Follows USDC (U.S Digital Cellular) Europe: Almost All of the European countries uses GSM (Global System for Mobile) Japan: uses Pacific Digital Cellular (PDC) standards Germany: uses C-450 cellular standards

by Ya Bao Cellular concept developed by Bell Laboratory provides the wireless communications to an entire population. Cellular telephone system has developed from first generation analog to second generation digital communications, and finally to the third-generation IMT-2000, (UMTS and CDMA2000).

by Ya Bao