10/3/2004 7. Transmission Media - Lin 1 CPET/ECET 355 7. Transmission Media Data Communications and Networking Fall 2004 Professor Paul I-Hai Lin Electrical.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
McGraw-Hill©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2004 Chapter 7 Transmission Media.
Advertisements

Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Computer Communication & Networks
Physical Media PHYSICAL MEDIA.
6/10/2015 Unit-1 : Data Communications 1 CS 1302 Computer Networks — Unit - 1 — — Data Communications — Text Book Behrouz.A. Forouzan, “Data communication.
1 Transmission Media Lesson 04 NETS2150/ Lesson Outline Wired or guided Media –Electromagnetics waves are guided along a solid medium Wireless.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Edited by MARINA MD ARSHAD, CSC FSKSM UTM JB
McGraw-Hill©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2004 Physical Layer PART II.
Transmission Media The transmission medium is the physical path by which a message travels from sender to receiver. Computers and telecommunication devices.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
ECOM 4314 Data Communications Fall September, 2010.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media. 7.2 Figure 7.1 Transmission medium and physical layer Transmission media are located below the physical layer and are.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
McGraw-Hill©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2004 Chapter 7 Transmission Media.
CIT 307 Online Data Communications Transmission Media Module 7 Kevin Siminski, Instructor.
Chapter 7 Transmission Media.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Kashif Bashir Chapter 7 Transmission Media.
06 - Winter 2006 ECE ECE 766 Computer Interfacing and Protocols 1 Transmission Media Electromagnetic signals representing data propagates in the transmission.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Transmission Media : Data Communication and Computer Networks Asst. Prof. Chaiporn Jaikaeo, Ph.D.
Chapter 7. Transmission Media
Chapter 7 Transmission Media.
Physical Media and Cabling COM211 Communications and Networks CDA College Theodoros Christophides
McGraw-Hill©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2004 Introduction to Data Communications and Networking Workshop I.
1 Kyung Hee University Transmission Media. 2 Kyung Hee University 7 장 Transmission media o Transmission medium and physical layer.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Transmission Media : Data Communication and Computer Networks Asst. Prof. Chaiporn Jaikaeo, Ph.D.
Chapter 7 Transmission Media. Figure 7.1 Transmission medium and physical layer.
Ch 7. Transmission Media. Transmission Media (1) Broad definition –Anything that can carry information In data communication: –Free space, metallic cable,
Transmission Media CORPORATE INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, BHOPAL DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRONICS AND COMMUNICATION ENGG. By- Vineeta Shakya.
Transmission Media The transmission medium is the physical path by which a message travels from sender to receiver. Computers and telecommunication devices.
Transmission Media Sadiq M. Sait. Transmission Medium l Guided (P-T-P, Multipoint) »Twisted Pair »Coaxial Cable »Optical Fiber l Unguided »Air »Vacuum.
7.1 Chapter 7 Review Transmission Media Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Part II. Physical Layer and Media Chapter 7. Transmission Media COMP 3270 Computer Networks Computing Science Thompson Rivers University.
Transmission Media ROTHMAN Amit kumar Gunjan Kumar Mayank Kumar.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
McGraw-Hill©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2004 Chapter 7 Transmission Media.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media Lecturer: Mrs. Rohani Hassan Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
McGraw-Hill©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2003 Chapter 4 Transmission Media.
7.1 Chapter 7 Transmission Media Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Chapter 7 Transmission Media.
Visit for more Learning Resources
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Chapter 7 Transmission Media.
7. Transmission Media.
PART II Physical Layer.
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
CIS 321- Fall 2004 Data Communications & Networking
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Chapter 7 Transmission Media.
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Chapter 5 Transmission Media.
Chapter 7 Transmission Media
Computer Communication & Networks
Anything that can carry information from a source to a destination.
NETWORK COMPONENTS PHYSICAL MEDIA
Physical Media PHYSICAL MEDIA.
Chapter 7 Transmission Media.
Presentation transcript:

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 1 CPET/ECET Transmission Media Data Communications and Networking Fall 2004 Professor Paul I-Hai Lin Electrical and Computer Engineering Technology Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 2 Transmission Media 1. Guided Media Twisted-Pair Cable: Shielded, unshielded Coaxial Cable Fiber-Optic 2. Unguided Media: Wireless Radio Waves Omnidirectional Antenna Microwaves Infrared

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 3 Transmission Media From p. 173, Figure 7.1 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 4 Transmission Media Classes of transmission Media From p. 174, Figure 7.2 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 5 Guided Media – UTP, STP Twisted-Pair Cable From p. 174, Figure 7.3 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 6 Guided Media – UTP, STP UTP and STP From p. 175, Figure 7.4 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 7 Guided Media – UTP, STP Categories of unshielded twisted-pair cables From p. 176, Table 7.1 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill Categor y Bandwi dth Data Rate Digital/AnalogUse 1very low < 100 kbps Analog Telephon e 2 < 2 MHz 2 MbpsAnalog/digitalT-1 lines 3 16 MHz 10 MbpsDigitalLANs 4 20 MHz 20 MbpsDigitalLANs MHz 100 Mbps DigitalLANs 6 (draft) 200 MHz 200 Mbps DigitalLANs 7 (draft) 600 MHz 600 Mbps DigitalLANs

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 8 Guided Media – UTP, STP UTP Connector From p. 176, Figure 7.5 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 9 Guided Media – UTP, STP Example 6-1: Solution From p. 177, Figure 7.6 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 10 Guided Media – Coax Cable Coaxial Cable From p. 177, Figure 7.7 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 11 Guided Media – Coax Cable From p. 178, Table 7.2 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill CategoryImpedanceUse RG  Cable TV RG  Thin Ethernet RG  Thick Ethernet

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 12 Guided Media – Coax Cable Coaxial Cable Connector From p. 178, Figure 7.8 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 13 Guided Media – Coax Cable Coaxial Cable Performance From p. 179, Figure 7.9 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 14 Guided Media – Fiber-Optic Bending of light rays From p. 180, Figure 7.10 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 15 Guided Media – Fiber-Optic Optical Fiber From p. 180, Figure 7.11 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 16 Guided Media – Fiber-Optic Propagation modes From p. 181, Figure 7.12 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 17 Guided Media – Fiber-Optic Modes From p. 181, Figure 7.13 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 18 Guided Media – Fiber-Optic Fiber Types From p. 182, Table 7.3 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill TypeCoreCladdingMode 50/ Multimode, graded- index 62.5/ Multimode, graded- index 100/ Multimode, graded- index 7/ Single-mode

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 19 Guided Media – Fiber-Optic Fiber Construction From p. 182, Figure 7.14 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 20 Guided Media – Fiber-Optic Fiber-optic cable connectors From p. 183, Figure 7.15 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 21 Guided Media – Fiber-Optic Optical fiber performance From p. 183, Figure 7.16 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 22 Unguided Media: Wireless Electromagnetic spectrum for wireless communication From p. 185, Figure 7.17 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 23 Unguided Media: Wireless Propagation methods From p. 185, Figure 7.18 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 24 Unguided Media: Bands From p. 186, Table 7.4 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill BandRange Propagatio n Application VLF3–30 KHzGroundLong-range radio navigation LF30–300 KHzGround Radio beacons and navigational locators MF300 KHz–3 MHzSkyAM radio HF3–30 MHzSky Citizens band (CB), ship/aircraft communication VHF30–300 MHz Sky and line-of- sight VHF TV, FM radio UHF300 MHz–3 GHz Line-of- sight UHF TV, cellular phones, paging, satellite SHF3–30 GHz Line-of- sight Satellite communication EHF30–300 GHz Line-of- sight Long-range radio navigation

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 25 Unguided Media: Wireless Wireless transmission waves From p. 186, Figure 7.19 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 26 Unguided Media: Wireless Omnidirectional antennas From p. 187, Figure 7.20 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 27 Unguided Media: Wireless Unidirectional antennas From p. 189, Figure 7.21 of Data Communications and Networking, Forouzan, McGrawHill

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 28 Unguided Media: Wireless Infrared RE814S PIR

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 29 Unguided Media: Wireless Infrared Rockwell PIR 325

10/3/ Transmission Media - Lin 30 Summary Questions?