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Chaos, Communication and Consciousness Module PH19510 Lecture 5 The Telephone
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Review of Lecture 3 Dawn of the electric age Key technologies Cells & Batteries Electromagnet Relay Use of standardised code
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Lecture 4 – The Telephone The nature of sound Telephone principles The early years, Bell & Edison Automatic dialling The Thermionic Valve Multiplexing
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Electric Universe David Bodanis £7.99 ISBN 0-349-11766-7 Aventis prize for popular science How Electrons hold the universe together
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Sound Waves Variation in pressure Amplitude (Loudness) Frequency (Pitch) Combine pure tones to form any sound (Fourier) Speed of sound 340 m/s (760mph) Sea Level Human Ear 30Hz – 20kHz Speech 300Hz – 3.4kHz
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The Fourier Transform Translates between Time and Frequency Easier to solve some problems in transformed domain
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Alexander Graham Bell 1876 First Telephone Microphone Sound Electricity Wires Transmit Signal Receiver Electricity Sound
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Thomas Edison (1847-1931) 1877 Phonograph 1877 Carbon granule microphone 1879 Incandescent Light
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The Carbon Granule Microphone Carbon Granules Diaphragm transmits pressure to granules Granules Pressed together lower resistance Resistance modulates current Battery at exchange provides power Microphone controls power
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Telephone with Carbon Microphone Diaphragm Carbon Granules Battery Electromagnet Diaphragm MicrophoneReciever
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Early Networks Manual switching Operators with plug boards Bell’s patents expire 1890s 6000 telephone companies !!! (US) Post Office retains monopoly in UK 1889 Strowger invents automatic dialling
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The Strowger Switch & Automatic Dialling Electromechanical switch 10 horizontal positions 10 vertical positions 100 lines/switch Pulse dialing Dial phone
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The Thermionic Valve The Diode 1904 J.Fleming Heated filament Cathode Electrons liberated If Anode is +ve Electrons attracted Current Flows One way device Anode –ve No Flow Diode Anode (+ve) Cathode (-ve)
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The Thermionic Valve The Triode 1907 Lee DeForest Grid between Cathode & Anode -ve voltage on grid repels electrons Control of anode current 1911 Amplification Anode (+ve) Cathode (-ve) Grid
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Thermionic Valves Amplification from 1911 More electrodes Power Hungry Still used for CRTs High Power microwaves
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Two into one will go !! Need many circuits between exchanges & especially between cities. Can’t use 1000s of pairs of wire Multiplexing Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM)
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Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) First used on telegraph Interleave messages Synchronised clocks Digital Signals FUD inarivsvete rL usa F irst u U niver s D ave L a
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Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM) Speech 300Hz – 3.4kHz Analogue Signals Modulation Multiply signal with carrier Shifts frequency of signal Allows many signals on one wire From exchange to exchange
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Amplitude Modulation
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Frequency Division Multiplexing Speech Signal Modulate 60Khz Carrier 60Hz - 64kHz 64kHz - 68kHz 60kHz 64Hz f ff 68Khz - 72kHz 72kHz - 76kHz … 300kHz 4kHz f
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Frequency Division Multiplexing Combine 12 speech channel to form group Carriers 60,64,68,72…kHz 60-108kHz Combine 5 groups to form supergroup 60 channels 312kHz – 552kHz Combine 5 supergroups Mastergroup 300 channels
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Review of Lecture 4 The nature of sound Telephone principles The early years, Bell & Edison Automatic dialling The Thermionic Valve Multiplexing
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