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CCNA 1 Module 3 Networking Media By Your Name Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Objectives • Copper media • Optical media • Wireless media Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Electricity Basics The basic unit of all matter is an atom. • Nucleus – center part of the atom (protons and neutrons) • Protons – particles that have positive charge • Neutrons – particles that have no charge (neutral) • Electrons – particles that have negative charge and orbit the nucleus Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Electricity Basics • Creating Stable Atoms – Electrons in certain atoms can be pulled free from the atom and made to flow – this is electricity (a free flow of electrons). • Static Electricity – Loosened electrons that stay in one place, without moving and with a negative charge. – Can create electrostatic discharge, which can create serious problems for computers. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Types of Electrical Materials • Insulators – Electrons flow poorly – Plastic, paper, rubber, dry wood, air, and glass • Conductors – Electrons flow well – Copper, silver, gold, solder, water with ions, humans • Semiconductors – Electrons flow can be controlled precisely – Carbon, germontum, gallium arsenide, silicon Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Measuring Electricity • • • • • • • Voltage Resistance and impedance Current Alternating current Direct current Circuits Cable specification and termination Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Current Flow A 6-volt flashlight uses a simple circuit. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Electrical Grounds Surge suppressors, uninterruptible power supplies, and wall outlets all connect to a transformer and to the earth ground. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Coaxial Cable • Coaxial cable consists of a hollow outer cylindrical conductor that surrounds a single inner wire made of two conducting elements. • It can be run without as many boosts from repeaters, for longer distances between network nodes than either STP or UTP cable. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Shielded Copper Cable • Shielded twisted-pair cable (STP) combines the techniques of shielding, cancellation, and twisting of wires. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Unshielded Twisted Pair • Unshielded twisted-pair cable (UTP) is a fourpair wire medium used in a variety of networks. Each of the 8 individual copper wires in the UTP cable is covered by insulating material. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Optical Media Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Electromagnetic Spectrum • Electromagnetic Energy – – – – – – Radio Microwaves Radar Visible light X-rays Gamma rays • If all the types of electromagnetic waves are arranged in order from the longest wavelength down to the shortest wavelength, a continuum called the electromagnetic spectrum is created. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Ray Model of Light • When electromagnetic waves travel out from a source, they travel in straight lines called rays. • Light travels at different slower speeds through materials like air, water, and glass. • When a light ray called the incident ray, crosses the boundary from one material to another, some of the light energy in the ray will be reflected back. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Reflection • When a ray of light (the incident ray) strikes the shiny surface of a flat piece of glass, some of the light energy in the ray is reflected. • The angle between the incident ray and a line perpendicular to the surface of the glass at the point where the incident ray strikes the glass is called the angle of incidence. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Refraction • When a light strikes the interface between two transparent materials, the light divides into two parts. • Part of the light ray is reflected back into the first substance, with the angle of reflection equaling the angle of incidence. • The remaining energy in the light ray crosses the interface and enters into the second substance. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Total Internal Reflection • A light ray that is being turned on and off to send data (1s and 0s) into an optical fiber must stay inside the fiber until it reaches the far end. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Laws of Reflection • The following two conditions must be met for the light rays in a fiber to be reflected back into the fiber with out any loss due to refraction: – The core of the optical fiber has to have a larger index of refraction than the material that surrounds it (the cladding). – The angle of incidence of the light ray is greater than the critical angle for the core and its cladding. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Multimode Fiber • If the diameter of the core of the fiber is large enough so that there are many paths that light can take through the fiber, the fiber is called “multimode” fiber. • Single-mode fiber has a much smaller core that only allows light rays to travel along one mode inside the fiber. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Single-Mode Fiber • The major difference between multimode and single-mode fiber is that single-mode allows only one mode of light to propagate through the smaller, fiber-optic core. • Single-mode fiber is capable of higher rates of data transmission and greater cable run distances than multimode fiber. • Single-mode fiber can carry LAN data up to 3000 meters. Multimode is only capable of carrying up to 2000 meters. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Other Optical Components • Optical fiber links use light to send data. • A transmitter is needed to convert the electricity to light and at the other end of the fiber convert the light back to electricity. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Other Optical Components (cont.) • The semiconductor devices that are usually used as receivers with fiber-optic links are called p-intrinsic-n diodes (PIN photodiodes). • Connectors are attached to the fiber ends so that the fibers can be connected to the ports on the transmitter and receiver. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Signals and Noise in Optical Fibers • The farther a light signal travels through a fiber, the more the signal loses strength. This attenuation is due to several factors involving the nature of fiber itself. – Scattering of light in a fiber is caused by microscopic nonuniformity (distortions) in the fiber that reflects and scatters some of the light energy. – Absorption makes the light signal a little dimmer. – Another factor that causes attenuation of the light signal is manufacturing irregularities or roughness in the core-to-cladding boundary. • Graded index multimode fiber is designed to compensate for the different distances the various modes of light have to travel in the large diameter core. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Installation, Care, and Testing of Optical Fiber • If the fiber is stretched or curved too tightly, it can cause tiny cracks in the core that will scatter the light rays. • Bending the fiber in too tight a curve can change the incident angle of light rays striking the core-tocladding boundary. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Installation, Care, and Testing of Optical Fiber (cont.) • Interducting protects the fiber, makes it easier to pull, and ensures that the bending radius (curve limit) of the fiber is not exceeded. • Two of the most important testing instruments are Optical Loss Meters and Optical Time Domain Reflectometers (OTDRs). Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Wireless Media Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com WLAN Organizations and Standards • A key technology contained within the 802.11 standard is Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS). • 802.11a covers WLAN devices operating in the 5 GHZ transmission band. • 802.11b increases transmission capabilities to 11Mbps. • 802.11g provides the same throughout as 802.11a but with backwards compatibility for 802.11b devices using Othogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) modulation technology. • Cisco has developed an access point that permits 802.11b and 802.11a devices to coexist on the same WLAN. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Wireless Devices and Topologies • An access point (AP) is commonly installed to act as a central hub for the WLAN "infrastructure mode". • The AP is hard wired to the cabled LAN to provide Internet access and connectivity to the wired network. • APs are equipped with antennae and provide wireless connectivity over a specified area referred to as a cell. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Access Points • To service larger areas, multiple access points may be installed with a degree of overlap. • A 20-30% overlap is desirable. • When a client is activated within the WLAN, it will start "listening" for a compatible device with which to "associate". • This is referred to as "scanning" and may be active Copyright 2003 or passive. www.ciscopress.com How WLANs Communicate • After establishing connectivity to the WLAN, a node will pass frames similarly to any other 802 network. • WLANs do not use a standard 802.3 frame. • WLANs use CSMA/CD • When a source node sends a packet, the receiving node returns a positive acknowledgment (ACK). Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Authentication and Association • IEEE 802.11 lists two types of authentication processes. – Open system – only the SSID must match – Shared key – requires WEP • Association permits a client to use the services of the AP to transfer data. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Radio Wave and Microwave Spectrums • Computers send data signals electronically. Radio transmitters convert these electrical signals to radio waves. • Changing electric currents in the antenna of a transmitter generates the radio waves. • Changing electric currents in the antenna of a transmitter generates the radio waves. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Signals and Noise on a WLAN • The most obvious source of a signal problem is the transmitting station and antenna type. • Leakage from a microwave of as little as one watt into the RF spectrum can cause major network disruption. • Fog or high moisture conditions can affect wireless networks. • Lightning can also charge the atmosphere and alter the path of a transmitted signal. Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com Wireless Security • • • • • • VPN EAP-MD5 Challenge LEAP (Cisco) User authentication Encryption Data authentication Copyright 2003 www.ciscopress.com