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1 3. Data Transmission
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 2 Contents Concept and Terminology Analog and Digital Data Transmission Transmission Impairments Asynchronous & Synchronous Transmission
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 3 Concept and Terminology Transmission medium Guided - twisted pair, coaxial cable, optical fiber Unguided - air, vacuum, sea water Direct link the transmission path in which signals propagate directly from the transmitter to the receiver with no intermediate devices Point-to-Point vs Multipoint transmission Point-to-point - Only two devices share the medium Multipoint - more than two devices share the same medium
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 4 Concept and Terminology Communication Modes Simplex Data is transmitted in one direction only. Ex) pager, TV Half-duplex Data is exchanged alternatively. Ex) Walkie-Talkie Duplex(or Full-duplex) data is exchanged in both directions simultaneously Ex) telephone AB AB Send and receive Only one way at a time AB Send receive simultaneously
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 5 Frequency, Spectrum and Bandwidth Time domain concepts Continuous signal Various in a smooth way over time Discrete signal Maintains a constant level then changes to another constant level Periodic signal Pattern repeated over time Aperiodic signal Pattern not repeated over time
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 6 Continuous & Discrete Signals
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 7 Periodic Signals
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 8 Sine Wave Peak Amplitude (A) maximum strength of signal volts Frequency (f) Rate of change of signal Hertz (Hz) or cycles per second Period = time for one repetition (T) T = 1/f Phase ( ) Relative position in time
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 9 Varying Sine Waves
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 10 Wavelength Distance occupied by one cycle Distance between two points of corresponding phase in two consecutive cycles Assuming signal velocity v = vT f = v c = 3*10 8 ms -1 (speed of light in free space)
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 11 Frequency Domain Concepts Signal usually made up of many frequencies Components are sine waves Can be shown (Fourier analysis) that any signal is made up of component sine waves Can plot frequency domain functions
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 12 All of the frequency components are integer multiple of one frequency (fundamental frequency) The period of the total signal is equal to he period of the fundamental frequency.
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 13 Frequency Domain X/2 -X/2 1.0
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 14 Spectrum & Bandwidth Spectrum range of frequencies contained in signal Absolute bandwidth width of spectrum Effective bandwidth Often just bandwidth Narrow band of frequencies containing most of the energy DC Component Component of zero frequency
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 15 Signal with DC Component
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 16 Data Rate and Bandwidth Signal bandwidth is limited by the channel bandwidth Effect of channel bandwidth on a digital signal
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 17 Analog and Digital Data Transmission The terms analog and digital are used in three contexts Data entities that convey meaning Signal electric or electromagnetic encoding of data Transmission the communication of data by the propagation and processing of signals
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 18 Analog and Digital Transmission Data Analog Data take on continuous values Ex) acoustic data, video data Digital Data take on discrete values Ex) text or character string Signal Analog Signal is a continuously varying electromagnetic wave Ex) acoustic signal, video signal Digital Signal is a sequence of voltage pulses Ex) horizontal sync/blanking pulse in video signal, binary digital signal
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 19 Analog Signals Carrying Analog and Digital Data
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 20 Digital Signals Carrying Analog and Digital Data
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 21 Analog and Digital Transmission Analog and Digital Data vs Signal
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 22 Analog and Digital Transmission Analog and Digital Signal vs Transmission
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 23 Analog Transmission Analog signal transmitted without regard to content May be analog or digital data Attenuated over distance Use amplifiers to boost signal Also amplifies noise
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 24 Digital Transmission Concerned with content Repeaters used Repeater receives signal Extracts bit pattern Retransmits Attenuation is overcome Noise is not amplified
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 25 Advantages of Digital Transmission Digital technology Low cost LSI/VLSI technology Data integrity Longer distances over lower quality lines Capacity utilization High bandwidth links economical High degree of multiplexing easier with digital techniques Security & Privacy Encryption Integration Can treat analog and digital data similarly
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 26 Transmission Impairments Generally, the received signal differs from the transmitted signal due to various transmission impairments Kinds of impairments Attenuation and attenuation distortion Delay distortion Noise
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 27 Attenuation The strength of a signal falls off with distance and this reduction is generally logarithmic. Attenuation introduces three considerations for transmission a received signal must have sufficient strength so that the receiver can detect and interpret the signal the signal must maintain a level sufficiently higher than noise Attenuation is an increasing function of frequency
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 28 Delay Distortion It is caused by the fact that the velocity of propagation of a signal through a guided medium varies with frequency. Various frequency components of a signal will arrive at the receiver at different times. Delay distortion particularly corrupts digital signal by causing intersymbol interference.
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 29 Noise Four categories of noise Thermal noise caused by thermal agitation of electrons in a conductor cannot be eliminated Intermodulation noise caused by nonlinearity in the transmitter, receiver, or by intervening transmission system Crosstalk caused by coupling between signal paths Impulse noise generated from various sources including external electromagnetic disturbances, such as lightning and faults and flaws in the communications system.
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 30 Noise Effect of noise on a digital signal
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Prof. Sang-Jo Yoo 31 Channel Capacity Various impairments limit maximum data rate. Channel capacity - the rate at which data can be transmitted over a given communication path under given condition Shannon’s formula, where C : the capacity of the channel (bps) W : the bandwidth of the channel (Hz) S : the signal power N : the noise power
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