How To Say What You Want Describing Signals Review Light is trapped in an optical fiber if it strikes the sides of the fiber at angles greater than the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Unit-2 Polarization and Dispersion
Advertisements

Physical Layer: Signals, Capacity, and Coding
Signal Encoding Techniques
Frequency modulation and circuits
Waveguides Part 2 Rectangular Waveguides Dielectric Waveguide
April Draw a reflected sound wave, labeling the angle of incidence and the angle of reflection. How do these angles compare? Draw the wave fronts.
Lecture 3 Light Propagation In Optical Fiber
1 Transmission Fundamentals Chapter 2 (Stallings Book)
ECE 4321: Computer Networks Chapter 3 Data Transmission.
Chapter 2 Data and Signals
Physical Layer CHAPTER 3. Announcements and Outline Announcements Credit Suisse – Tomorrow (9/9) Afternoon – Student Lounge 5:30 PM Information Session.
EE 4272Spring, 2003 Chapter 3 Data Transmission Part II Data Communications Concept & Terminology Signal : Time Domain & Frequency Domain Concepts Signal.
Optical Fiber Basics Part-3
Chapter 6: Data Transmission Business Data Communications, 4e.
Introduction to Wireless Communications. Wireless Comes of Age Guglielmo Marconi invented the wireless telegraph in 1896 Communication by encoding alphanumeric.
Chapter 3 Data and Signals
Chapter 15: Data Transmission Business Data Communications, 5e.
Department of Electronic Engineering City University of Hong Kong EE3900 Computer Networks Data Transmission Slide 1 Continuous & Discrete Signals.
Chapter 2 Fundamentals of Data and Signals
William Stallings Data and Computer Communications 7th Edition (Selected slides used for lectures at Bina Nusantara University) Data, Signal.
Module 3.0: Data Transmission
Bending and Bouncing Light Standing Waves, Reflection, and Refraction.
Those Interfering Signals Modes and Dispersion in Fibers.
Lecture 4b Fiber Optics Communication Link 1. Introduction 2
Chapter 2: Fundamentals of Data and Signals. 2 Objectives After reading this chapter, you should be able to: Distinguish between data and signals, and.
3.1 Chapter 3 Data and Signals Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Putting Light to Work for You Features of Signal Transfer.
Fiber-Optic Communications
1 Chapter 2 Fundamentals of Data and Signals Data Communications and Computer Networks: A Business User’s Approach.
Modulation of Waves (FM Radio, AM Radio and Television)
SIMS-201 Wire and Fiber Transmission Systems. 2  Overview Chapter 15 Wire and Fiber Transmission Systems Wire as a transmission medium Fiber optics as.
Review: Laws of Reflection and Refraction
P6 – The Wave Model of Radiation
Chapter 2 Basic Communication Theory Basic Communications Theory w Understand the basic transmission theory, and figure out the maximum data rate. w.
Chapter 6: Data Transmission Business Data Communications, 4e.
Review: The application layer. –Network Applications see the network as the abstract provided by the transport layer: Logical full mesh among network end-points.
Data Communications & Computer Networks, Second Edition1 Chapter 2 Fundamentals of Data and Signals.
Optical Fiber Basics-Part 2
Fiber Optic Transmission
ECEN 621, Prof. Xi Zhang ECEN “ Mobile Wireless Networking ” Course Materials: Papers, Reference Texts: Bertsekas/Gallager, Stuber, Stallings,
FIBER OPTICS. Increase in Bitrate-Distance Product Agrawal-Fiber Optic Communications.
Lecture Six: The Nature of Light and the Laws of Geometric Optics
Lecture 21 Nature of Light Reflection and Refraction
The Physical Layer Lowest layer in Network Hierarchy. Physical transmission of data. –Various flavors Copper wire, fiber optic, etc... –Physical limits.
1 Chapter 2 Fundamentals of Data and Signals Data Communications and Computer Networks: A Business User’s Approach.
Fiber Optic Transmission SL/HL – Option C.3. Reflection/Refraction Reflection – A wave encounters a boundary between two mediums and cannot pass through.
Light Waves. What is Light? Light is the range of frequencies of the electromagnetic spectrum that stimulate the retina of the eye.
Review First Exam What have we learned? Any traveling sinusoidal wave may be described by y = y m sin(kx   t +  ) Light always reflects with an angle.
CS Spring 2009 CS 414 – Multimedia Systems Design Lecture 3 – Digital Audio Representation Klara Nahrstedt Spring 2009.
Chapter 22 Reflection and Refraction of Light. The Particle Nature of Light “Particles” of light are called photons Each photon has a particular energy.
Putting Light to Work for You Features of Signal Transfer.
COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS (5marks)
Fiber Optic Transmission SL/HL – Option F Mr. Jean.
FIBER OPTIC TRANSMISSION
Chapter 2 Fundamentals of Data and Signals
Propagation of Light Through Optical Fiber. Outline of Talk Acceptance angle Numerical aperture Dispersion Attenuation.
The law of reflection: The law of refraction: Image formation
Fiber Optics.
Module 4 Cable Testing.
IB Physics Option F – Fibre Optics Mr. Jean. The plan: Video clip of the day Fibre Optics – C+-+Imaginghttps://ibphysics2016.wikispaces.com/Option+
Transmission Media. Quiz: ANGEL->Lessons->Quiz 2 Figure 1Figure 2 Figure 3Figure 4.
Data Communications and Computer Networks Chapter 1 Network Architecture Models Logical and physical connections.
How To Say What You Want Describing Signals What have we learned? Any traveling sinusoidal wave may be described by y = y m sin(kx   t +  )  is the.
RAY THEORY AND OPTICAL WAVEGUIDE BY DR. NEENA GUPTA Assistant Professor E&EC Deptt. Punjab Engineering College,Deemed University,CHANDIGARH.
Communication systems. Learning outcomes describe communication systems in terms of –signal, carrier, noise, range, data transmission rate and bandwidth.
Optical Fiber Basics Part-3
KOMUNIKASI DATA Materi Pertemuan 10.
CHAPTER 3 Physical Layer.
CHAPTER 3 Physical Layer.
MODULATION AND DEMODULATION
Presentation transcript:

How To Say What You Want Describing Signals

Review Light is trapped in an optical fiber if it strikes the sides of the fiber at angles greater than the critical angle for the core-cladding interface The core must have a higher index of refraction than the cladding for total internal reflection to occur. The numerical aperture (NA) of a fiber relates the maximum angle of incidence on the front of the fiber to the indices of refraction of the fiber: NA = n 0 sin  m = (n n 2 2 ) 1/2.

Review (cont.) Any periodic function of frequency f 0 can be expressed as a sum over frequency of sinusoidal waves having frequencies equal to nf 0, where n is an integer. The sum is called the Fourier series of the function, and a plot of amplitude (coefficient of each sin/cos term) vs. frequency is called the Fourier spectrum of the function. Any non-periodic function (so frequency f 0  0) can be expressed as an integral over frequency of sinusoidal waves having frequencies. The integral is called the Fourier transform of the function, and a plot of amplitude vs. frequency is called the Fourier spectrum of the function. The Fourier spectrum of a wider pulse will be narrower than that of a narrow pulse, so it has a smaller bandwidth.

How do we send signals? Radio antenna (AM frequencies around 1000 kHz, FM frequencies around 100 MHz) TV antenna (VHF frequencies are around 100 MHz, on either side of FM frequencies, UHF frequencies around 500 MHz) These are public transmissions, and so the carrier frequencies are set and regulated Coaxial cable Optical waveguides ISDN These are private transmissions, and sent over range of frequencies

Optical waveguides pros and cons Message remains private Flexibility Low Loss Insensitive to EM interference Very high bandwidth BUT Expensive to connect to every house Require electricity-to-light converters Either multi-modal, or less efficient (better coupling makes this less relevant)

Chromatic Dispersion Index of refraction is dependent on wavelength. Typical materials exhibit higher indices of refraction for lower wavelengths (higher energies) Thus violet light bends the most through a prism or water and appears on the outside of a rainbow.

Optical Fiber Dispersion/Attenuation Dispersion means spreading Signals in a fiber will have several sources of dispersion: –Chromatic: Material: index of refraction depends on wavelength (prism) Waveguide: some of wave travels through cladding with different index of refraction (primarily single-mode) – leads to wavelength-dependent effects –Modal: different modes travel different paths and so require different amounts of time to travel down fiber (CUPS) Also have attenuation/loss due to scattering/absorption by fiber material, which depends on wavelength/frequency

Modes in Optical Fibers Modes in a fiber are specific field distributions that are independent of the length traveled down the fiber. However, these modes travel at slightly different speeds which matters more with longer fibers. Fields of modes look like harmonics of standing waves

Modes Combine to Give Path of Light (Figures adapted from Photonics – not to scale) To add Mode 1 and Mode 2, must add fields. BUT, modes travel at different speeds, so sum of fields changes as go down the fiber Result is one of the paths light will take Mode 1 Mode 2 2 Intensity Pattern of Sum

Modes in Optical Fibers (cont.) Modes are like sines and cosines in Fourier series: each path that light takes down a fiber can be expressed as a sum of modes. Can make a single-mode fiber by: –reducing diameter of fiber so smaller cone of light enters –reducing NA of fiber so smaller cone of light is trapped

What Exactly Is Bandwidth, and Why Do We Care? A range of frequencies Generally found by taking the frequencies with amplitudes more than half the maximum amplitude (e.g., on a Fourier spectrum) Bandwidth for a medium is the range of frequencies which can pass through that medium with a minimum of separation Sampling theory says that a signal transmitting N different amplitudes per second requires a bandwidth of at least N/2: B>N/2 Usually this ideal is not achieved, and the required bandwidth is larger –Grant says B approx N

Some ways to modulate signals Amplitude modulation: –A signal with a constant carrier frequency is sent –The original signal becomes the amplitude of the transmitted signal –Since the transmitted signal is not a simple sine wave, it has a bandwidth of Fourier components Frequency modulation: –A signal with a constant carrier frequency is sent –The original signal becomes the change in frequency of the transmitted signal –Since the transmitted signal is not a simple sine wave, it has a bandwidth of Fourier components –FM is easier to amplify, since only the frequency determines the signal.

Schemes for Encoding ASCII - The American Standard Code for Information Interchange is a standard seven-bit code that was proposed in 1963, and finalized in ASCII was established to achieve compatibility between various types of data processing equipment. ASCII is the common code for microcomputer equipment. The standard ASCII character set consists of 128 decimal numbers ranging from zero through 127 assigned to letters, numbers, punctuation marks, and the most common special characters. The Extended ASCII Character Set also consists of 128 decimal numbers and ranges from 128 through 255.

Pulses and Data Can represent binary data with pulses in a variety of ways could look like... Non-return-to-zero (NRZ) Return-to-zero (RZ) Manchester Coding Bipolar Coding Notice that the NRZ takes half the time of the others for the same pulse widths

Distortion No physical change is instantaneous If change is too slow, won’t have time to rise before needs to fall Results in data loss Sharp edges Since rise is generally exponential, we define “rise time” to be time from 10% of max value to 90% of max; “fall time” is time from 90% to 10% To be able to resolve data, the rise time and fall time must be less than 70% of the bit width Sizeable rise time Really Distorted

What exactly is a decibel? A ratio, often of power BUT, in logarithmic form: dB = 10 log (P 2 /P 1 ) e.g., if my received signal is 1/10 as big as my transmitted signal, my “gain” would be gain dB = 10 log (1/10) = -10 The minus sign denotes loss, or a second power less than the initial power

Why care about decibels? Signal-to-noise ratios are often given in decibels You want the signal to be larger than the noise, so the ratio (in dB) should be positive For digital data, we use bit error rate, not signal-to-noise Bit error rate is ratio of wrong bits to total bits - it should be small, whereas SNR should be large Bit error rate can be expressed as a plain number, or in decibels

Before the next class,... Read On-Line Reading on Interference and Diffraction Do Reading Quiz Finish Homework 7 (start 8) Do Activity 06 Evaluation by Midnight tonight.