* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Parts of Communication System Channel
Cellular network wikipedia , lookup
Universal asynchronous receiver-transmitter wikipedia , lookup
Matched filter wikipedia , lookup
History of wildlife tracking technology wikipedia , lookup
Quadrature amplitude modulation wikipedia , lookup
Phase-shift keying wikipedia , lookup
Telecommunications engineering wikipedia , lookup
FM broadcasting wikipedia , lookup
Radio-controlled model wikipedia , lookup
Cellular repeater wikipedia , lookup
Amplitude modulation wikipedia , lookup
Single-sideband modulation wikipedia , lookup
Communication System Dr inż. Zdzisław Pólkowski Badea George-Cosmin CONTENTS • Definition; • Characteristic of communication system; • Parts of Communication system; • Pulse code modulation; • Modes of channel operation. Definition • Electronic Communication System- defined as the whole mechanism of sending and receiving as well as processing of information electronically from source to destination; • Communication System- to produce an accurate replica of the transmitted information that is to transfer information between two or more points through a communication channel, with minimum error; •A system or facility for transferring data between persons and equipment. The system usually consists of a collection of individual communication networks, transmission systems, relay stations, tributary stations and terminal equipment capable of interconnection and interoperation so as to form an integrated whole. • Example – Radiotelephony, broadcasting, point-to-point, mobile communications, computer communications, radar and satellite systems. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/communication+system Characteristic of Communication System • Must be a Sender and Receiver; • A protocol is a set of rules which governs the transfer of data between computers. Protocols allow communication between computers and networks. • Handshaking is used to establish which protocols to use. Handshaking controls the flow of data between computers; • Protocols will determine the speed of transmission , error checking method, size of bytes, and whether synchronous or asynchronous; •Examples of protocols are : token ring, CSMA/CD, X.25, TCP/IP; http://www.boredofstudies.org/wiki/Characteristics_of_communication_systems Parts of Communication System Parts of Communication System • Communication systems consist of five parts: Source; Transmitter; Channel; Receiver; Destination. Input Signal Received Output Transmitted Signal Receiver Signal Signal Transmitter Communication (RX) (TX) Channel http://comutronics.blogspot.com/p/communication-q_8.html Parts of Communication System Source (input signal) : • The source originates a message, such as: human voice, the television picture, data. • If the data is non-electrical (analogue) it must be converted by an input transducer (microphone, camera) into an electrical waveform (baseband modulation) referred to as the baseband signal or message signal. Input Signal Received Output Transmitted Signal Receiver Signal Signal Transmitter Communication (RX) (TX) Channel http://comutronics.blogspot.com/p/communication-q_8.html Parts of Communication System Transmitter (TX): • The transmitter modifies the base-band signal for efficient transmission. • Characteristics: Modulation, amplification, transmission frequency (TX), transmission power, coding; •MW modem, WiFi Card, Bluetooth Card, RF transmitter. Input Signal Received Output Transmitted Signal Receiver Signal Signal Transmitter Communication (RX) (TX) Channel http://comutronics.blogspot.com/p/communication-q_8.html Parts of Communication System Channel: •The Channel is a medium , such as wire, coaxial cable, a waveguide, an optical fiber or a radio link, through which the transmitter output is sent; • Channel characteristics, ability for transmission, noise, interference, power needed, fading, multipath. Input Signal Received Transmitted Signal Receiver Signal Transmitter Communication (RX) (TX) Channel Output Signal http://comutronics.blogspot.com/p/communication-q_8.html Parts of Communication System Receiver (RX): • The receiver reprocesses the signal received from the channel by undoing the signal modifications made at the transmitter and the channel; • Characteristics: demodulation, receiver frequency (RX), Receiving power, decoding; •MW modem, WiFi Card, Bluetooth Card, RF receiver. Input Signal Received Output Transmitted Signal Receiver Signal Signal Transmitter Communication (RX) (TX) Channel http://comutronics.blogspot.com/p/communication-q_8.html Parts of Communication System Destination (output signal): • The destination is the unit to which the message is communicated; • The receiver output is fed to the output transducer, which converts the electrical signal to its original form. Input Signal Received Output Transmitted Signal Receiver Signal Signal Transmitter Communication (RX) (TX) Channel http://comutronics.blogspot.com/p/communication-q_8.html Pulse code modulation Pulse code modulation (PCM) • Analog transmission is not particularly efficient. When the signal-to-noise ratio of an analog signal deteriorates due to attenuation, amplifying the signal also amplifies noise. • Digital signals are more easily separated from noise and can be regenerated in their original state. The conversion of analogue signals to digital signals therefore eliminates the problems caused by attenuation. •Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) is the simplest form of waveform coding. Waveform coding is used to encode analogue signals (for example speech) into a digital signal. •The combined encoder/decoder is known as acodec. A PCM encoder performs three functions: Sampling; Quantising; Encoding http://www.technologyuk.net/telecommunications/telecom_principles/pulse_code_modulation.shtml Pulse code modulation (PCM) Sampling: • Sampling is the process of reading the values of the filtered analogue signal at discrete time intervals. • A scientist called Harry Nyquist discovered that the original analogue signal could be reconstructed if enough samples were taken. • He found that if the sampling frequency is at least twice the highest frequency of the input analogue signal, the signal could be reconstructed using a low-pass filter at the destination. http://www.technologyuk.net/telecommunications/telecom_principles/pulse_code_modulation.shtml Pulse code modulation (PCM) Quantising: • Quantisation is the process of assigning a discrete value from a range of possible values to each sample obtained. The number of possible values will depend on the number of bits used to represent each sample. •Quantisation can be achieved by either rounding the signal up or down to the nears available value, or truncating the signal to the nearest value which is lower than the actual sample. • Quantisation noise can be reduced by increasing the number of quantisation intervals, because the difference between the input signal amplitude and the quantization interval decreases as the number of quantization intervals increases. http://www.technologyuk.net/telecommunications/telecom_principles/pulse_code_modulation.shtml Pulse code modulation (PCM) Encoding : • Encoding is the process of representing the sampled values as a binary number in the range 0 to n. The value of n is chosen as a power of 2, depending on the accuracy required. •Increasing nreduces the step size between adjacent quantisation levels and hence reduces the quantisation noise. The down side of this is that the amount of digital data required to represent the analogue signal increases. http://www.technologyuk.net/telecommunications/telecom_principles/pulse_code_modulation.shtml Models of channel operation Models of channel operation 1. Simplex: •Simplex is one direction of communication, it requires only one line of communication; • Simplex channels are not often used in communication system because it is not possible to send back error or control signals to the transmit end; • A good example would be TV or Radio. http://uva.ulb.ac.be/cit_courseware/datacomm/dc_014.htm Models of channel operation 2. Half-Duplex: • Two directions of communication but only one direction is allowed through at a time; • Only one end transmits at a time, the other end receives; • An advantage is that the single lane is cheaper then the double lane; • Example of half-duplex is talk-back radio, and CB Radio. http://uva.ulb.ac.be/cit_courseware/datacomm/dc_014.htm Models of channel operation 3. Full Duplex • Two ways of communication with data can travel in both directions simultan cously; • It can perform feedback. The most expensive; • Example., is mobile phone line. http://uva.ulb.ac.be/cit_courseware/datacomm/dc_014.htm