ECS452 2017/2 DR - Prapun: Elements of Digital Commu. Sys

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Sirindhorn International Institute of Technology

Thammasat University
School of Information, Computer and Communication Technology

ECS452 2017/2 Part I.1 Dr.Prapun


1 Elements of a Digital Communication System
1.1. Figure 1 illustrates the functional diagram and the basic elements of
Elements of digital commu. sys.
a digital communication system.

Message Transmitter

Information Source Channel Digital


Source Encoder Encoder Modulator
Transmitted
Signal

Noise & Interference


Channel

Recovered Message Receiver Received


Signal
Source Channel Digital
Destination Decoder Decoder Demodulator

1 Figure 1: Basic elements of a digital communication system

1.2. The source output may be either


• an analog signal, such as an audio or video signal,
or
• a digital signal, such as the output of a computer, that is discrete in
time and has a finite number of output characters.

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1.3. Source Coding: The messages produced by the source are converted
into a sequence of bits.
• This process is called source coding or source encoding.
• For this course, we want to also represent the source output (message)
by as few bits as possible.
◦ In other words, we seek an efficient representation of the source
output that results in little or no redundancy.
◦ Therefore, source coding may be referred to as data compression.
1.4. Channel Coding:
• Introduce, in a controlled manner, some redundancy in the binary in-
formation sequence that can be used at the receiver to overcome the
effects of noise and interference encountered in the transmission of the
signal through the channel.
◦ The added redundancy serves to increase the reliability of the re-
ceived data and improves the fidelity of the received signal.
• See Examples 1.5 and 1.6.
Example 1.5. Trivial channel coding: Repeat each binary digit n times,
where n is some positive integer.
Example 1.6. More sophisticated channel coding: Taking k information
bits at a time and mapping each k-bit sequence into a unique n-bit sequence,
called a codeword.
• The amount of redundancy introduced by encoding the data in this
manner is measured by the ratio n/k. The reciprocal of this ratio,
namely k/n, is called the rate of the code or, simply, the code rate.
1.7. The binary sequence at the output of the channel encoder is passed
to the digital modulator, which serves as the interface to the physical
(analog) communication channel.
• Since nearly all the communication channels encountered in practice
are capable of transmitting electrical signals (waveforms), the primary
purpose of the digital modulator is to map the binary information se-
quence into signal waveforms.

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• The digital modulator may simply map the binary digit 0 into a wave-
form s0 (t) and the binary digit 1 into a waveform s1 (t). In this manner,
each bit from the channel encoder is transmitted separately.
We call this binary modulation.
• The modulator may transmit b coded information bits at a time by us-
ing M = 2b distinct waveforms si (t), i = 0, 1, . . . , M − 1, one waveform
for each of the 2b possible b-bit sequences.
We call this M -ary modulation (M > 2).
1.8. The communication channel is the physical medium that is used
to send the signal from the transmitter to the receiver.
• The physical channel may be
◦ a pair of wires that carry the electrical signal, or
◦ an optical fiber that carries the information on a modulated light
beam, or
◦ an underwater ocean channel in which the information is transmit-
ted acoustically, or
◦ free space over which the information-bearing signal is radiated by
use of an antenna.
Other media that can be characterized as communication channels are
data storage media, such as magnetic tape, magnetic disks, and optical
disks.
• Whatever the physical medium used for transmission of the informa-
tion, the essential feature is that the transmitted signal is corrupted in
a random manner by a variety of possible mechanisms, such as addi-
tive thermal noise generated by electronic devices; man-made noise,
e.g., automobile ignition noise; and atmospheric noise, e.g., electrical
lightning discharges during thunderstorms.
• Other channel impairments including noise, attenuation, distortion,
fading, and interference (such as interference from other users of the
channel).

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1.9. At the receiving end of a digital communication system, the digital
demodulator processes the channel-corrupted transmitted waveform and re-
duces the waveforms to a sequence of numbers that represent estimates of
the transmitted data symbols (binary or M -ary).
This sequence of numbers is passed to the channel decoder, which at-
tempts to reconstruct the original information sequence from knowledge of
the code used by the channel encoder and the redundancy contained in the
received data.

• A measure of how well the demodulator and decoder perform is the


frequency with which errors occur in the decoded sequence. More pre-
cisely, the average probability of a bit-error at the output of the decoder
is a measure of the performance of the demodulator-decoder combina-
tion.
• In general, the probability of error is a function of the code characteris-
tics, the types of waveforms used to transmit the information over the
channel, the transmitter power, the characteristics of the channel (i.e.,
the amount of noise, the nature of the interference), and the method
of demodulation and decoding.

1.10. As a final step, when an analog output is desired, the source decoder
accepts the output sequence from the channel decoder and, from knowledge
of the source encoding method used, attempts to reconstruct the original
signal from the source.
• Because of channel decoding errors and possible distortion introduced
by the source encoder, and perhaps, the source decoder, the signal at
the output of the source decoder is an approximation to the original
source output.
• The difference or some function of the difference between the origi-
nal signal and the reconstructed signal is a measure of the distortion
introduced by the digital communication system.

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