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CS3505, the Internet -physical layer physical layer - purpose To transmit bits, by encoding them onto signals; and to receive the signals, interpreting them as bits input: sequence of bit S, from DL or MAC layer output: sequence of bit S’, to DL or MAC layer ideally, S = S’ Physical layer definitions signal 1. mechanism used to carry information over time OR distance 2. sign or gesture giving information 3. sequence of electrical or optical impulses or waves Signals examples: physical gesture, wave, hand signal flashes of light (eg, Morse code) sound: vary tone, loudness or duration flags smoke mirrors electical voltages transmission definition 1. the action of conveying electrical or optical signals from 1 point to 1 or more other points in space 2. the process of sending information from 1 point to another things necessary for transmission systems path for signal transfer (medium) transform signal to appropriate from (code) launch the signal (transmit) remove, receive or detect the signal (receive) signal - can be modeled as f(t) t --> f(t) ... f(t) represents some physical quantity: voltage, amplitude, frequency, etc. digital/ analog signals digital signal 1. assumed to take on finite number of values, AND 2. has meaning only at discrete points in time. digital/analog signals analog signal: 1. a signal that is an analog of the quantity being represented; eg, signal voltage proportional to volume of sound 2. continuous in range of values 3. also continuous in time; always valued. digital/analog signals digital data: text, bits; discrete valued. analog data: sound, vision; music, etc. continuous valued. Note: digital (analog) signals can transport both digital and analog data, so 4 combinations (DD,DA,AD,AA) possible transmission media transmission medium: the physical element through which signals must pass, from transmitter to receiver examples: air, water, space, copper wires, optical fiber two main categories: guided and unguided propagation delays of signals in media transmission terminology spectrum signal - range of frequencies making up a bandwidth data rate transmission terminology bandwidth key factor in determining data rate; however do not confuse bandwidth (hertz) and and data rate (bps) obstacles to transmission- attenuation interference cross talk modems, codecs modem (modulator-demodulator) translates a digital signal (bit) into an analog signal, for transmission as an analog signal; receives the corresponding analog signal, and translates back into digital (bit) purpose: use analog medium for digital data/signals example: PC modem, phone lines; TV cable modems modems, codecs, bauds, bits codec (codec/decoder) converts analog data into digital form (bits), and the reverse. main technique: PCM PCM (pulse code modulation) absolute values, based on sampling theorem; (nearly) total information channel capacity channel - a path in the transmission medium through which signals/bits may pass channel capacity - maximum number bits/sec the channel can support factors which determine channel capacity bandwidth signalling technique noise transmission media Guided Media twisted pair (copper) coaxial cable (copper) optical fibers (silicon... plastic or glass) Unguided broadcast Media radio frequencies terrestrial microwave satellite microwave infrared, FSO transmission media : twisted pair copper a good conductor of electricity 2 copper wires form circuit twisting gives better electrical properties backbone of the local telephone system also heavily used in data comm., LANs used for both digital, analog signals basic telephone wire vs. "Cat 5" transmission media : twisted pair various quality levels: voice grade, “Cat 5” data rates: 1-100 Mbps, depending on quality; voice grade at low end, Cat 5 top end. higher quality are more tightly twisted advantages mature - well known technology connections, splicing easy production, installation techniques well known relatively cheap, easy to install transmission media : twisted pair disadvantages cost of copper signal attenuation increases with frequency, starting at low frequencies often needs shield to reduce noise pickup suseptible to cross talk if lines close together susceptible to lightning strikes less bandwidth transmission media : coaxial cable thick cable, consisting of an inner copper core, insulator, surrounded by another conductor (braided shield), wrapped in a protective shield and outer cover Properties (approx.) bandwidth: ~500Mhz, analog data rates: 500 Mbps or more repeater spacing: 1-10 Km Two basic types: broadband (TV) baseband (ethernet) transmission media : coaxial cable broadband: TV cable, analog signals baseband: LANs, digital signals Uses long distance telephone cable TV LANs Note: higher capacity than t.p., but also bulkier and difficult to work with in limited spaces transmission media : coaxial cable advantages lower attenuation than t.p. at high frequencies wider usable bandwidth less susceptible to interference easy to tap disadvantages physically bulky limited bending radius heavier transmission media : optical fiber OF a major milestone in communications; first fibers developed early1970s since about 1988, majority of all U.S. long distance traffic over OF due to OF, the networks have potential to be faster than the computer ---- a big flip flop transmission media : optical fiber A thin, flexible medium of extremely pure plastic/glass. Thickness about 2-125 microns. Core often 62.5 microns. much higher data rates; 100M to several G. prop. speed approximately 2/3 c, as with tp and coax; bits much smaller repeater spacing: much higher... up to thousands of miles transmission media : optical fiber principle: each bit is transported by a tiny ray of light(darkness), guided by the medium. requires extremely accurate transmitters, receivers; much finer degree of synchronization transmission media : optical fiber principle: total internal reflection Two major types of fiber 1. multi-mode 2. single mode/monomode limitations modal dispersion (multimode) material dispersion (single mode) attenuation (single mode, at very high data rates) transmission media : optical fiber advantages much higher bandwidth, real and potential very low radiation, noise pickup; shielding not needed, crosstalk not a problem very low attenuation, and little variation in 100-300 Mhz range not susceptible to lightning, etc. small physical size and weight cost will decrease very difficult to tap transmission media : optical fiber disadvantages cost technology less mature splicing difficult and critical installation more difficult Key note: fiber has literally made the network faster than the computer. We have far to go before we reach the potential data rates of fiber.... unguided media : broadcast radio lower frequency ranges: roughly 30MHz-1GHz omnidirectional data rates not as high as microwave, so less useful for data, but good for broadcast radio better progagation characteristics; less attenuation, less interference from rain, etc. unguided media lower frequency ranges: broadcast radio 30-300 kHz MF AM radio 3-30 MHz HF shortwave radio, CB 30-300 MHz VHF FM radio, VHF TV microwave frequency ranges: 2 to 40 GHz infrared: just below visible light; frequency in hertz 1011 - 1014 unguided media : terrestrial microwave focused beam, 1-2 degrees high frequencies 3-20 GHz --> high data rates paraboloid shaped antennas better repeater spacing than cable high data rates more susceptible to rain, clouds, dust, etc. than others unguided media : satellite microwave high frequency; ( ~same as terr. uwave) geosynchronous satellite --> repeater in sky broadcast media 22,300 miles --> 35,000 Km receives, xmits on diff. frequencies to avoid interference unguided media : satellite microwave need spacing of 4 deg. between satellites significant prop delay ~ 250 ms less difficulty with atmosphere 3 major differences with terr. microwave unguided media : FSO, or free space optics uses optical signals in open air limited distances only very high transmission rates possible much faster to set up and take down then conventional wired networks security less a problem than other wireless methods due to focused beam and limited distance very useful in some cases unguided media : infrared uses infrared light to transmit bits similiar characteristics as free space optical also very useful in some cases voice channel & telephone system basic telephone network designed to deliver quality voice service voice emits analog signal - sound waves - from 30 to 10,000 Hz. Human ears detect up to 20K Hz. most energy in 200-3500 Hz range; Standard analog voice channel is 4000 Hz. This key number selected many years ago by phone company. standard PCM digital voice channel is 64 Kbps. most local telephone loops still analog all long distance in US is digital; majority is fiber. voice channel & telephone system voice not very sensitive to most noise and distortion; for this and other reasons, local telco loops not well suited to modern data networks However, the local telco networks are one of few comm. links between homes, businesses and rest of the world Structure of U S Telephone networks /companies local loops “last mile” and telcos long distance networks and companies network equipment video channels and cable TV system TV cable system established recent decades switching equipment designed for broadcast TV standard TV - 6 MHz per channel coaxial cables capable carry many TV channels. these have capacity to carry thousands of voice channels and/or high speed data -- but need appropriate switching equipment at home office, and in homes AT&T attempted, failed to use coax cable system for Internet, voice -- probable a business error