Introduction To Information Technology: Lecture #15
Introduction To Information Technology: Lecture #15
Section 001
Introduction to Information
Technology
Lecture #15
Overview
Communication systems
Analog Modulation
AM
FM
Digital Modulation
ASK
FSK
Modems
Communication systems
Digital
Analog
The block diagram on the top shows the blocks common to all
communication systems
Remember the components of a communications
system:
Input transducer: The device that converts a physical signal
from source to an electrical, mechanical or electromagnetic
signal more suitable for communicating
Transmitter: The device that sends the transduced signal
Transmission channel: The physical medium on which the
signal is carried
Receiver: The device that recovers the transmitted signal from
the channel
Output transducer: The device that converts the received signal
back into a useful quantity
Analog Modulation
The purpose of a communication system is to transmit information signals
(baseband signals) through a communication channel
The term baseband is used to designate the band of frequencies
representing the original signal as delivered by the input transducer
For example, the voice signal from a microphone is a baseband signal,
and contains frequencies in the range of 0-3000 Hz
The “hello” wave is a baseband signal:
Since this baseband signal must be transmitted through a communication channel
such as air using electromagnetic waves, an appropriate procedure is needed to
shift the range of baseband frequencies to other frequency ranges suitable for
transmission, and a corresponding shift back to the original frequency range after
reception. This is called the process of modulation and demodulation
Remember the radio spectrum:
Input Transmission
transducer Modulator
Channel
EM waves (modulated
Carrier signal)
Baseband signal
(electrical signal) Receiver
Output
Demodulator
transducer
Types of Analog Modulation
Amplitude Modulation (AM)
Amplitude modulation is the process of varying the amplitude
discuss
Amplitude Modulation
Carrier wave
Baseband signal
Modulated wave
Amplitude varying-
frequency constant
Frequency Modulation
Carrier wave
Modulated wave
Frequency varying-
amplitude constant
AM vs. FM
AM requires a simple circuit, and is very easy to generate.
It is simple to tune, and is used in almost all short wave broadcasting.
The area of coverage of AM is greater than FM (longer wavelengths
(lower frequencies) are utilized-remember property of HF waves?)
However, it is quite inefficient, and is susceptible to static and other
forms of electrical noise.
correction
converter
Transmission
coding
Input Modulator
Error
transducer A/D Channel
Carrier EM waves
Receiver (modulated signal)
analog signal digital signal
correction
detection/
converter
Carrier wave
ASK
modulated
signal
Amplitude varying-
frequency constant
Carrier present Carrier absent
Frequency Shift Keying
1 0 1 1 0 0 1
Digital
information
Carrier 1
(frequency #1)
Carrier 2
(frequency #2)
FSK
modulated
signal
Frequency varying-
amplitude constant
Modems
Modems are devices used to enable the transfer of data over the public switched
telephone network (PSTN)
The name modem comes from the name MOulator- DEModulator which
describes the function the modem performs to transfer digital information over
an analog network
The goal is to produce a signal that can be transmitted easily and decoded to
reproduce the original digital data. Primarily used to communicate via telephone
lines, modems can be used over any means of transmitting analog signals
There are many kinds of modems available today:
Internal modem:
A modem card in your computer that is integrated within the system
Less expensive than external modems
Disadvantage is that you need to access inside the computer to replace the
modem
External modem
A device that connects externally to your computer through a serial port
External power supply does not drain power from the computer
Modem activity can easily be observed
More expensive than an internal modem
Source: http://Wikipedia.com
DSL (Digital Subscriber Line)
A high-speed data service that works over conventional telephone lines
and is typically offered by telephone companies
It does not occupy the phone line-you can still talk on the phone
Speed is much higher than regular modem
Cable modem
A device that connects to the existing cable feed and to an Ethernet
network card in the PC (also called a NIC for Network Interface Card)
Is different than a common dial up modem
Supports higher speeds
Typically offered by cable companies