Computer Communication & Networks
Computer Communication & Networks
Data can be analog or digital. The term analog data refers to information that is continuous; digital data refers to information that has discrete states. Analog data take on continuous values. Digital data take on discrete values.
Note
Note
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.
Analog Vs Digital
Analog Signals
Sine Wave
Cont
Three parameters to describe a sine wave Peak amplitude Frequency and time period Phase
1. 2. 3.
Note
The bandwidth of a composite signal is the difference between the highest and the lowest frequencies contained in that signal.
Bandwidth
Digital Signals
Digital Signals
In addition to being represented by an analog signal, information can also be represented by a digital signal. For example, a 1 can be encoded as a positive voltage and a 0 as zero voltage. A digital signal can have more than two levels. In this case, we can send more than 1 bit for each level.
Digital Signal
Solution
The bit interval is the inverse of the bit rate. Bit interval = 1/ 2000 s = 0.000500 s = 0.000500 x 106 ms = 500 ms
Note
The bit rate and the bandwidth are proportional to each other.
Analog Vs Digital
A very important consideration in data communications is how fast we can send data, in bits per second, over a channel. Data rate depends on three factors: 1. The bandwidth available 2. The level of the signals we use 3. The quality of the channel (the level of noise)
Defines theoretical maximum bit rate for Noiseless Channel: Bit Rate=2 X Bandwidth X log2L
Example
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
Example 8
Consider the same noiseless channel, transmitting a signal with four signal levels (for each level, we send two bits). The maximum bit rate can be calculated as:
Note
Increasing the levels of a signal may reduce the reliability of the system.
Defines theoretical maximum bit rate for Noisy Channel: Capacity=Bandwidth X log2(1+SNR)
Example
Consider an extremely noisy channel in which the value of the signal-to-noise ratio is almost zero. In other words, the noise is so strong that the signal is faint. For this channel the capacity is calculated as C = B log2 (1 + SNR) = B log2 (1 + 0)
= B log2 (1) = B 0 = 0
Example
We can calculate the theoretical highest bit rate of a regular telephone line. A telephone line normally has a bandwidth of 4KHz. 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
Example
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?
Solution
First, we use the Shannon formula to find our upper limit.
C = B log2 (1 + SNR) = 106 log2 (1 + 63) = 106 log2 (64) = 6 Mbps
Then we use the Nyquist formula to find the number of signal levels.
6 Mbps = 2 1 MHz log2 L L = 8
Note
The Shannon capacity gives us the upper limit; the Nyquist formula tells us how many signal levels we need.
Transmission Impairments
Transmission Impairments
Signals travel through transmission media, which are not perfect. The imperfection causes signal impairment. This means that the signal at the beginning of the medium is not the same as the signal at the end of the medium. What is sent is not what is received. Three causes of impairment are attenuation, distortion, and noise.
Transmission Impairments
Decibel
Used to signal gained or lost strength db = 10 log P2/P1 Db= 20 log V2/V1
Example
Suppose a signal travels through transmission medium and its power is reduced to one half. Calculate attenuation loss?
Signal Distortion
attenuation
distortion
noise
Performance
One important issue in networking is the performance of the networkhow good is it?
Performance
Throughput
Latency
Propagation Time
Note
The bandwidth-delay product defines the number of bits that can fill the link.
Sampling
Pulse Code Modulation Sampling Rate: Nyquist Theorem
PCM
Note
According to the Nyquist theorem, the sampling rate must be at least 2 times the highest frequency contained in the signal.
Transmission Modes
The conversion involves three techniques: line coding, block coding, and scrambling. Line coding is always needed; block coding and scrambling may or may not be needed.
Number of bits per second = Data Rate Number of signal elements per second = Pulse Rate
Pulse Rate = 1/ 10-3= 1000 pulses/s Bit Rate = Pulse Rate x log2 L = 1000 x log2 2 = 1000 bps
DC Component
Lack of Synchronization
Example 3
In a digital transmission, the receiver clock is 0.1 percent faster than the sender clock. How many extra bits per second does the receiver receive if the data rate is 1 Kbps? How many if the data rate is 1 Mbps?
Solution
At 1 Kbps: 1000 bits sent 1001 bits received1 extra bps At 1 Mbps: 1,000,000 bits sent 1,001,000 bits received1000 extra bps