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Data and Computer Communications Chapter 3 – Data Transmission Ninth Edition by William Stallings Data and Computer Communications, Ninth Edition by William Stallings, (c) Pearson Education - Prentice Hall, 2011 Data Transmission What we've got here is failure to communicate. Paul Newman in Cool Hand Luke Data Transmission The successful transmission of data depends on two factors: 1) quality of the signal being transmitted (garbage in, garbage out) 2) characteristics of the transmission medium Transmission Terminology Transmission Terminology Data transmission occurs between transmitter and receiver over some transmission medium. Communication is in the form of electromagnetic waves. Guided media twisted pair, coaxial cable, optical fiber Unguided media (wireless) air, vacuum, seawater Transmission Terminology Transmission Terminology Simplex signals transmitted in one direction • eg. Television Half duplex both stations transmit, but only one at a time • eg. police radio Full duplex simultaneous transmissions • eg. telephone Frequency, Spectrum and Bandwidth Time Domain Concepts analog signal • signal intensity varies smoothly with no breaks digital signal • signal intensity maintains a constant level and then abruptly changes to another level periodic signal • signal pattern repeats over time aperiodic signal • pattern not repeated over time Analog and Digital Signals Periodic Signals Sine Wave (periodic continuous signal) peak amplitude (“A” in the previous slide) frequency (f) maximum strength of signal typically measured in volts rate at which the signal repeats Hertz (Hz) or cycles per second period (T) is the amount of time for one repetition T = 1/f phase () relative position in time within a single period of signal Varying Sine Waves s(t) = A sin(2ft +) Wavelength () the wavelength of a signal is the distance occupied by a single cycle can also be stated as the distance between two points of corresponding phase of two consecutive cycles especially when v=c assuming signal velocity v, then the wavelength is related to the period as = vT or equivalently f = v • c = 3*108 ms-1 (speed of light in free space) • For copper: v=0.55c to 0.77c Frequency Domain Concepts signals are made up of many frequencies components are sine waves Fourier analysis can show that any signal is made up of components at various frequencies, in which each component is a sinusoid can plot frequency domain functions Addition of Frequency Components (T=1/f) (c) is the sum of f & 3f http://www.falstad.com/f ourier/ Frequency Domain Representations frequency domain function of Fig 3.4c (previous slide) frequency domain function of single square pulse Spectrum & Bandwidth Signal with dc Component Data Rate and Bandwidth any transmission system has a limited band of frequencies limiting bandwidth creates distortions this limits the data rate that can be carried on the transmission medium most energy in first few components square waves have infinite components and hence an infinite bandwidth If only two frequencies get through the transmission system, the wave form shown in the previous slide would be received. There is a direct relationship between data rate and bandwidth. Analog and Digital Data Transmission data entities that convey information signals electric or electromagnetic representations of data transmission communication of data by propagation and processing of signals Acoustic Spectrum (Analog) -> définition du décibel Analog and Digital Transmission (1080i vs 1080p : http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2413044,00.asp) (Digital Data) Examples: IRA (International reference alphabet) Text Character strings Advantages & Disadvantages of Digital Signals Audio Signals frequency range of typical speech is 100Hz-7kHz easily converted into electromagnetic signals varying volume converted to varying voltage can limit frequency range for voice channel to 300-3400Hz Video Signals to produce a video signal a TV camera is used USA standard is 483 lines per frame, at a rate of 30 complete frames per second actual standard is 525 lines but 42 lost during vertical retrace horizontal scanning frequency is 525 lines x 30 scans = 15750 lines per second (63.5 μs per line but 11 μs is lost during horizontal retrace -> 52.5 μs ) max frequency reached if line alternates black and white (450 columns) max frequency of 4.2MHz (450/2 cycles in 52.5 μs) Video Signals http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1080p 2.1 megapixels X frame rate 1 pixel needs 3 X 8 bits = 24 bits 24 fps => 2.1 X 24 X 24 Mbits/s 50 fps => 2.1 X 24 X 50 Mbits/s 60 fps => 2.1 X 24 X 60 Mbits/s Compression techniques are often used. Analog Signals Modulator/demodulator Digital Signals Similar to modem but for voice signal Coder/decoder Transmitter/receiver (Analog and Digital Transmission) Transmission Impairments signal received may differ from signal transmitted causing: In analog systems -> degradation of signal quality In digital systems-> bit errors most significant impairments are attenuation attenuation distortion (some freq. are more attenuated than others) delay distortion (velocity of waves depends on their frequencies) noise ATTENUATION signal strength falls off with distance over any transmission medium varies with frequency Equalize attenuation across the band of frequencies used by using loading coils or amplifiers. Received signal strength must be: •strong enough to be detected •sufficiently higher than noise to be received without error Strength can be increased using amplifiers or repeaters. Attenuation Distortion Delay Distortion occurs because propagation velocity of a signal through a guided medium varies with frequency various frequency components arrive at different times resulting in phase shifts between the frequencies particularly critical for digital data since parts of one bit spill over into others causing intersymbol interference Delay Distortion Noise unwanted signals inserted between transmitter and receiver => is the major limiting factor in communications system performance Categories of Noise Intermodulation noise • produced by nonlinearities in the transmitter, receiver, and/or intervening transmission medium • effect is to produce signals at a frequency that is the sum or difference of the two original frequencies (sosmat.com) Categories of Noise Crosstalk: Impulse Noise: caused by external electromagnetic interferences noncontinuous, consisting of irregular pulses or spikes short duration and high amplitude minor annoyance for analog signals but a major source of error in digital data a signal from one line is picked up by another can occur by electrical coupling between nearby twisted pairs or when microwave antennas pick up unwanted signals Channel Capacity Maximum rate at which data can be transmitted over a given communication channel under given conditions Channel characteristics : bandwidth data rate noise error rate in cycles average rate of in bits per per noise level corrupted second second or over path bits Hertz main limitations constraint due to on physical achieving properties efficiency is noise Nyquist Bandwidth In the case of a channel that is noise free: if rate of signal transmission is 2B then can carry signal with frequencies no greater than B given bandwidth B, highest signal rate is 2B for binary signals, 2B bps needs bandwidth B Hz can increase rate by using M signal levels Nyquist Formula is: C = 2B log2M data rate can be increased by increasing M however this increases burden on receiver noise & other impairments limit the value of M Shannon Capacity Formula considering the relation of data rate, noise and error rate: faster data rate shortens each bit so bursts of noise corrupts more bits given noise level, higher rates mean higher errors Shannon developed formula relating these to the signal-to-noise ratio -> SNR= (signal power) / (noise power) capacity C = B log2(1+SNR) (ex. SNR=0 -> C=0) theoretical maximum capacity get much lower rates in practice SNRdb=10 log10 (SNR) Summary transmission concepts and terminology guided/unguided media frequency, spectrum and bandwidth analog vs. digital signals data rate and bandwidth relationship transmission impairments attenuation/delay distortion/noise channel capacity Nyquist/Shannon