Week 04 Signal
Week 04 Signal
Signals
Introduction
Analog Signal
Digital Signal
Transmission Impairment
Performance
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Introduction
To be transmitted, data must be transformed to
electromagnetic signals.
Signals can be analog or digital. Analog signals can have
an infinite number of values in a range; digital signals
can have only a limited number of values.
In data communication, we commonly use periodic
analog signals and aperiodic digital signals.
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Analog Signal
Analog Signal
Single Composite
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Single Signal
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Peak Amplitude
Signal represent the absolute value of highest intensity, proportional to
energy
Example: Electric signal, amplitude is measured in volt (v)
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Period and Frequency
Frequency and period are inverses of each other.
Frequency is the rate of change with respect to time. Change
in a short span of time means high frequency. Change over a
long span of time means low frequency.
If a signal does not change at all, its frequency is zero. If a
signal changes instantaneously, its frequency is infinite.
f=1/T
T=1/f
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Units of periods and frequencies
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Phase
Phase describes the position of the waveform
relative to time zero.
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Example
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Time Domain & Frequency
Domain
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Composite Signal
Square wave
Three Harmonics
Adding first
three harmonics
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Frequency Spectrum
Comparison
A signal using the frequency domain and containing all
its components
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Bandwidth
The range of frequencies that medium can pass
The difference between the highest and the
lowest frequencies
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Example 2
If a periodic signal is decomposed into five sine waves with
frequencies of 100, 300, 500, 700, and 900 Hz, what is the
bandwidth? Draw the spectrum, assuming all components have a
maximum amplitude of 10 V.
B = fh - fl = 900 - 100 = 800 Hz
The spectrum has only five spikes, at 100, 300, 500, 700, and
900
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Example 3
A signal has a bandwidth of 20 Hz. The highest frequency is 60 Hz.
What is the lowest frequency? Draw the spectrum if the signal
contains all integral frequencies of the same amplitude.
B = fh - f l fl = 60 - 20 = 40 Hz
20 = 60 - fl
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Example 4
A signal has a spectrum with frequencies between
1000 and 2000 Hz (bandwidth of 1000 Hz). A
medium can pass frequencies from 3000 to 4000 Hz (a
bandwidth of 1000 Hz). Can this signal faithfully pass
through this medium?
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Bit rate & interval
Bit interval is the time required to send one
single bit.
Bit rate is the number of bits interval (number of
bits send in 1 second.)
Bit interval and bit rate is inverses of each other
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Example 5
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Analog vs. Digital
The analog bandwidth of a medium is expressed
in hertz; the digital bandwidth, in bits per
second.
Digital transmission needs a low-pass channel.
Analog transmission can use a band-pass
channel.
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Data Rate Limit
Noiseless Channel: Nyquist Bit Rate
C = B log2 (1 + SNR)
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Example 7
Consider a noiseless channel with a bandwidth of 3000 Hz
transmitting a signal with two signal levels. The maximum
bit rate can be calculated as
Bit Rate = 2 3000 log2 2 = 6000 bps
= B log2 (1) = B 0 = 0
We can calculate the theoretical highest bit rate of a regular telephone
line. A telephone line normally has a bandwidth of 3000 Hz (300 Hz
to 3300 Hz). The signal-to-noise ratio is usually 3162. For this
channel the capacity is calculated as
C = B log2 (1 + SNR) = 3000 log2 (1 + 3162)
= 3000 log2 (3163)
C = 3000 11.62 = 34,860 bps 27
Example 9
We have a channel with a 1 MHz bandwidth. The SNR
for this channel is 63; what is the appropriate bit rate and
signal level?
Impairment
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Attenuation
Loss of energy
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Example 12
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Noise
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Throughput
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Propagation Time
Propagation speed measures the distance a signal
or a bit can travel through a medium in 1 s.
Propagation time measures the time required for a
signal or a bit can travel through a medium from one
point to another.
Propagation time is calculated by dividing the
distance by the propagation speed
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THE END
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©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000