Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCandice Evans Modified over 9 years ago
1
Week 7 Lecture 1+2 Digital Communications System Architecture + Signals basics
2
Old Communication : Analog Next Slide
5
Today: we use “Digital” Block Diagram on Digital Communication Systems
6
Review: Why Digital Comm?
8
The points may be considered as the input of a Digital Communication System where messages consist of sequences of "symbols" selected from an alphabet e.g. levels of a quantizer or telegraph letters, numbers and punctuations. The objective of a Source Encoder (or data compressor) is to represent the message-symbols arriving at point A2 by as few digits as possible. Thus, each level (symbol) at point is A2 mapped, by the Source Encoder, to a unique codeword of 1s and 0s and, at point B,we get a sequence of binary digits. Continuous Info. Source Sampler QuantizerSource Encoder
9
There are two ways to reduce the channel noise/interference effects: 1. to introduce deliberately some redundancy in the sequence at point B and this is what a Discrete Channel Encoder does. This redundancy aids the receiver in decoding the desired sequence by detecting and many times correcting errors introduced by the channel; 2. to increase Transmitter's power - point T often very expensive therefore better to trade transmitter's power for channel bandwidth.
10
Discrete Channel Encoder Interleaver Digital Modulation Channel Encoder
12
Channel Decoder DeInterleaver De- Modulator
13
Source Decoder Receiver The source decoder processes the sequence received from the output of the channel decoder and, from the knowledge of the source encoding method used, attempts to reconstruct the signal of the information source.
14
A SIMPLIFIED BLOCK STRUCTURE (Digital source) Note: For Digital source -- Quality is measured as the Bit Error Rate (BER)
15
An Internet System (Digital source) based on Cellular Network in the core
16
Digital Transmission of Analogue Signals (voice) Not BER (like in Digital Source case, previous case)
17
It is clear from the previous discussion that signals (representing bits) propagate through the networks. Therefore the following sections are concerned with the main properties and parameters of communication signals.
18
Communication Signals Frequency Domain (Spectrum): very important in Communications
19
Classification of Signals according to their description
20
Classification of Signals: according to their periodicity
21
according to their signal energy
23
according to their spectrum
24
TD/FD: OPERATIONS
25
More On Transformations
26
WOODWARD's Notation The evaluation of FT, that is involves integrating the product of a function and a complex exponential - which can be difficult; so tables of useful transformations are frequently used (next 2 slides). However, the use of tables is greatly simplified by employing Woodward's notation for certain commonly occurring situations. main advantage of using Woodward's notation: allows periodic time/frequency functions to be handled with FT rather than Fourier Series
27
FOURIER TRANSFORMS - TABLES
28
FOURIER TRANSFORMS – TABLES (cont’d)
29
IMPORTANT SPECTRUM SHAPES
30
finite duration (i.e. Energy signals)
32
Modulation principle
33
Multiplication (TD) Convolution (FD) In FD, it becomes Shift operations!
34
Some frequently used signals
37
we can generate any desired "rect" function by scaling and shifting; see for instance the following table effects of temporal scaling:
38
Bandwidth of a signal Bandwidth: the range of the significant frequency components in a signal waveform Examples of message signals (baseband signals) and their bandwidth: television signal bandwidth 5.5MHz speech signal bandwidth 4KHz audio signal bandwidth 8kHz to 20kHz Examples of transmitted signals (basepass signals) and their bandwidth: to be discussed latter on Note that there are various definitions of bandwidth, e.g. 3dB bandwidth, null-to-null bandwidth, Nyquist (minimum) bandwidth (next slide)
39
Definitions: Signal Bandwidth
40
REDUNDANCY The degree of similarity in a signal is provided by its Redundancy autocorrelation function. For instance the autocorrelation function of a signal
41
SIMILARITY The degree of similarity between two signals is given by their cross- correlation function. For instance the cross-correlation function between two signals
42
On Comm Noise Usually people assume: Additive White Gaussian Noise (AWGN)
43
Noise Noise
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.