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20101 The Physical Layer Chapter 2
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20102 Bandwidth-Limited Signals
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20103 Maximal Data Rate Shannon –Hartley law (1948): a channel with a bandwidth of H Hz and random noise maximum bps (bits per second) is: H log 2 (1+S/N) S/N: signal power to noise power (dB: 10 log 10 (S/N) ) current coding techniques approaches the limit To achieve higher speed: better cables and electronics higher bandwith (less attenuation of higher frequencies) lower internal noise decrease influence of external EM radiation light via fiber optics
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20104 Coax, Twisted Pair, fiber Category 5 UTP Category 3 UTP Signal is difference in voltage
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20105 The Electromagnetic Spectrum
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20106 The Telephone Local Loop: Modems The use of both analog and digital transmissions for a computer to computer call. Conversion is done by the modems and codecs.
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20107 Modems Binary signal Amplitude modulation Frequency modulation Phase modulation Modern methods combine these modulation modes and use more amplitudes, frequencies and phases to approach the Shannon limit
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20108 (Asymmetric)Digital Subscriber Lines A typical (A)DSL equipment configuration.
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20109 ADSL frequency bands Operation of ADSL using discrete multitone modulation. gap, larger for ISDN In each channel a “modem: of maximal 56 kbps, reduced automatically when S/N is too high ADSL2+ goes upto 2,2 GHz
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201010 Internet over Cable
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201011 TV Cable Spectrum Allocation Frequency allocation in a typical cable TV system used for Internet access
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201012 Wireless Local Loops Architecture of an LMDS (IEEE 802.16) system. Superseded by ADSL and cable TV WiMAX (IEEE 802.16) is more promising now
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201013 Frequency Division Multiplexing (a) The original bandwidths. (b) The bandwidths raised in frequency. (b) The multiplexed channel. With fibers: different wavelength of light
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201014 Time Division Multiplexing
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201015 CDMA – Code Division Multiple Access Each sender has an unique code of m bits, called chips “1”: chip sequence is send “0”: complement of it is send
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201016 CDMA – Chip decoding (a) Binary chip sequences (b) Bipolar chip sequences (c) Six transmissions (d) Recovery of C’s signal
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201017 The Mobile Telephone System First-Generation Mobile Phones: Analog Voice Second-Generation Mobile Phones: Digital Voice (GSM) Third-Generation Mobile Phones: Digital Voice and Data (UMTS) Fourth-Generation: based on LTE ?
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201018 Global System for Mobile Communications GSM uses 2 * 124 frequency channels, each of which uses an eight-slot TDM system
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201019 GSM data framing other framing: Control (base to mobile) to manage the system Paging (base to mobile) to alert users to calls for them Access (bidirectional) for call setup and channel assignment
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201020 Neighbouring cells Different frequencies for neighbouring cells (fixed sender / receiver)
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201021 Energy, environment Prediction over 4 year: 1/3 of IT budget goes to energy bills 2/3 of that for cooling How to dispose of 512 million old PC’s
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