Chapter 3 - Data Transmission: Concepts and Terminology
Chapter 3 - Data Transmission: Concepts and Terminology
Chapter 3 - Data Transmission: Concepts and Terminology
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Transmission Terminology
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Transmission Terminology
direct link
no intermediate devices
point-to-point
direct link
only 2 devices share link
multi-point
more than two devices share the link
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Transmission Terminology
Simplex transmission
one direction
eg. television
Half-duplex transmission
either direction, but only one way at a time
eg. police radio (walkie-talkie: push-to-talk and
release-to-listen)
Full-duplex transmission
both directions at the same time
eg. telephone
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digital 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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Periodic signals
The signal period T is the
inverse of signal frequency f :
1
f
T in sec onds ( s )
f in Hertz ( Hz )
T
s (t T ) s (t )
Sine wave
Mathematically, the sine wave is given by :
s (t ) A sin( 2 ft )
Three parameters :
1. Peak amplitude (A)
2. Frequency ( f )
3. Phase ( )
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Wavelength ()
is the distance occupied by one cycle
assuming signal velocity v, then = vT
or equivalently f = v, since T=1/f
for the special case when v=c
c = 3*108 m/s (speed of light in free space)
c=f
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k 1, k odd
k
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Fourier Transform
Mathematical tool that relates the frequency-domain
description of the signal to its time-domain description
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Time-domain vs frequency-domain
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Time-domain vs frequency-domain
Timedomain
Frequencydomain
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Absolute bandwidth
width of spectrum
effective bandwidth
often just bandwidth
narrow band of frequencies containing most energy
DC Component
component of zero frequency
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Acoustic Spectrum
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transmission
communication of data by propagation and
processing of signals
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Audio Signals
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Digital Data
as generated by computers etc.
has two dc components
bandwidth depends on data rate
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Analog Signals
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Digital signals
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Transmission Impairments
signal received may differ from signal
transmitted causing:
analog - degradation of signal quality
digital - bit errors
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Attenuation
where signal strength falls off with distance
depends on medium
received signal strength must be:
strong enough to be detected
sufficiently higher than noise to receive without error
Delay distortion
propagation velocity varies with frequency
hence various frequency components
arrive at different times
particularly critical for digital data
since parts of one bit spill over into others
causing intersymbol interference
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Noise
Additional unwanted signals inserted
between transmitter and receiver
Thermal
due to thermal agitation of electrons
uniformly distributed
white noise
N 0 kT (W / Hz )
N 0 noise power density in watts per 1Hz of bandwidth
k Boltzmann' s cons tan t 1.38 10 23 J / K
T Temprature in Kelvins
Noise
crosstalk
a signal from one line is picked up by another
impulse
irregular pulses or spikes
eg. external electromagnetic interference
short duration
high amplitude
a minor annoyance for analog signals
but a major source of error in digital data
a noise spike could corrupt many bits
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Noise: example
0
+5V
-5V
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Data-rate
Data rate: is the rate, in bits per second (bps), at
which data can be communicated
1
1
1
data Rate R
50 kbps
bit duration Tb 0.02m sec
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Bandwidth
Bandwidth B 3 f 1 f 2 f
Assume f 1KHz ,
then Bandwidth B 2 KHz
Absolute B
Effective B width of main lobe
1
X
Assume X 1 m sec,
then effective B 1KHz
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Channel Capacity
Channel Capacity: max possible rate at which data
can be transmitted over a given communication
path, under given conditions
Channel capacity is a function of :
data rate - in bits per second [bps]
bandwidth - in Hertz [Hz]
noise - on communication link
error rate - the rate at which errors occur, reception of 1
when 0 is transmitted, and visa versa
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Nyquist Bandwidth
Consider noise free channels
If rate of signal transmission is 2B then we can
carry signal with frequencies no greater than B
i.e., given bandwidth B, highest signal rate is 2B
signal power
Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR): SNR
noise power
C 2 B log 2 M
8 10 6 2 106 log 2 M
M 16
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Pout
GdB 10 log10
Pin
Pin : input power level
Pout : output power level
Pout
Pin
LdB 10 log10
10 log10
Pin
Pout
Pin
Vin2 / R
Vin
L
10
log
10
log
20
log
10
10
10
2
The decibel voltage loss: dB
Pout
Vout
/R
Vout
where V is the voltage across resistor R
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Pin
10mW
10 log10
3dB
Pout
5mW
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powerW
10 log10
10 log10 ( powerW )
1W
powermW
10 log10
1mW
Example
Given a receiver with an effective noise temperature of 294K
and a 10 MHz bandwidth. Find the thermal noise level (N0) at
the receivers output in units of dBW?
N 0 kT
[W / Hz ]
N kTB [W ],
k Boltzmann' s const. 1.38 10 23 J / K
T Temprature in Kelvins
B Bandwidth
kTB
N dBW 10 log10
10 log10 kTB 10 log10 k 10 log10 T 10 log10 B
1W
10 log10 (1.38 10 23 ) 10 log10 (294) 10 log10 (107 )
228.6 24.7 70
133.9dBW
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N0
N0
kTR
in decibel notation,
Eb
N0
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Example
For Binary Phase Shift Keying (BPSK) modulation, Eb/N0 = 8.4
dB is required for a bit error rate of 10-4 (one bit error out of
every 10000 bits). If the effective noise temperature is 290 K
(room temperature) and the data rate is 2400 bps, what
received signal power level is required?
Eb
N0
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N0
N0
Noise power N N 0 B, where B is the bandwidth
Eb
S/R S B
S
, where
is the Signal to Noise Ratio ( SNR )
N0 N / B N R
N
S
The Shannon channel capacity : C B log 2 (1 SNR ) B log 2 (1 )
N
S
2C / B 1
N
Eb
S B
B
B
C/B
C/B
2 1 2 1
N0 N R
R
C
where C / B is the spectral efficiency
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Example
Suppose we want to find the minimum Eb/N0 required to achieve
a spectral efficiency C/B of 6bps/Hz
Eb
B
1
2C / B 1 2 6 1 10.5 10.21 dB
N0
C
6
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